Let's Dance
In the remote hills of eastern Gujarat, every year after Holi, the quiet village of Kavant transforms into a living canvas of rhythm, color, and ancestral pride. The Kavant Fair, also known as Kavant Gher, is one of India’s most vibrant and authentic tribal gatherings — a celebration where the Rathwa community comes together to thank the earth for a generous harvest and to renew the heartbeat of their heritage through dance, music, and ritual.
Over the course of a few days, the fields of Kavant are transformed into open-air theatres of devotion. Men and women, their bodies painted with white dots made of rice paste and ash, move in rhythmic unison to the echo of drums and the calls of flutes. Peacock feathers shimmer in the sunlight, silver jewelry catches the dust-filled air, and the sound of bells and footsteps rises like prayer.
The photographs in this exhibition capture the raw energy, grace, and visual poetry of the festival — the merging of body and rhythm, nature and faith, community and art. Through these images, Kavant reveals itself not merely as a celebration, but as a living archive of memory and identity — a place where dance becomes language, and every color tells a story of belonging.

Thums Up

Small Drum

Shades & Stars

Red & Green

Pretty In Grey

Peacock

One Step

Moustache

Man With Horn

Horse Rider

Honda

Green Nails




