Right after Kochi Biennale and a buzzy start in Jaipur, the art season officially arrives in Delhi with the four-day-long India Art Fair (February 5-8). But as always, the real action spills beyond the fairgrounds—into galleries, standalone exhibitions, performances, and gatherings across the city.
Consider this your Nod-approved guide to making the most of Delhi, India Art Fair and everything around it. From parallel exhibitions and city-wide showcases with names like Ai Weiwei, Tyeb Mehta, and Tara Lal in the mix, these are shows, spaces, and moments worth stepping out for.
The highlights at India Art Fair
The first piece of art you witness at the India Art Fair will not be inside a gallery, but along the fair’s facade. Goa-based Afrah Shafiq, one of our favourite multimedia artists, has used embroidery traditions from around the world—from cross-stitch to counted-thread embroidery—to bring together an archive of patterns: centipede from Kheng, Meghalaya, mangoes from Karnataka, and a shaman from Peru. You can even interact with the exhibit with a special AR layer.
As you dash in and out of gallery spaces, pause to explore the many outdoor art projects peppered across the NSIC Grounds, including The Charpai Project by Ayush Kasliwal x Goji, supported by Serendipity Arts and Recycle of Life by Paresh Maity, presented by Art Alive Gallery. The fair also debuts a landmark performance in collaboration with HH Art Spaces, supported by Soho House, featuring Yuko Kaseki, Uriel Barthélémi, and Suman Sridhar / Black Mamba that merges movement, sound, and voice framed around the act of “feeding,” and functions as ritualistic gestures of connection, healing, and transformation.
This year’s IAF spotlight is surely the Marina Abramović exhibit that comprises 1,200 unique photographic stills from the artist’s two video works, ‘Red Period’ and ‘Blue Period’, 1998. Much like Picasso’s Blue Period and Matisse’s Red Period, which signified distinct phases in their artistic evolution, Abramović’s works explore the extremities of human emotion, physical endurance, and the symbolism of colour.
India Art Fair is ongoing until February 8. Register here.











