Reviving Heirloom Textiles for a New Age: In Conversation with Sanjay Garg
An evening exploring the past and the future of Indian textiles.
© Raw Mango
Recommended age: 12+ years
5.30pm - 6.30pm: Talk in Theatre
6.30pm - 7.30pm: Drinks in Westpac Long Gallery
Join Sanjay Garg (Raw Mango Founder) in conversation with Megha Kapoor (INPRINT Magazine, Vogue India), for an evening exploring the past and the future of Indian textiles, followed by drinks in the AM’s Westpac Long Gallery.
Raw Mango, founded by Sanjay Garg in 2008, is a design house with a practice grounded in textile research, historical inquiry and living craft traditions.
Working collaboratively with karigar (master craftspeople) across India to research and revitalise regional weaving and dyeing techniques, the studio also interrogates heirloom pieces and museum collections to create contemporary textiles that innovate upon skills refined over centuries.
Approaching textiles as archives within a continuously evolving cultural ecology, this talk will situate Raw Mango’s work within broader questions of material culture: how old technologies endure, adapt, and generate new aesthetic vocabularies.
Sanjay Garg
© Raw Mango
Sanjay Garg emerged from an upbringing in the village of Mubarikpur, Rajasthan. As a student of textile design, he developed his unique language in 2008, working in Chanderi, Madhya Pradesh. Garg undertook innovations within the yarn and weaving process to create a new visual vocabulary and weaving interventions which, over a decade later, visually define Chanderi today.
A commitment to experimentation underpins his process, with further explorations in Mashru, Benarasi and Ikat. Always informed by India, Garg constantly engages with established rubric to imagine new possibilities.
Megha Kapoor
© Studio Inprint
Megha Kapoor is a renowned editor, creative director and writer known for her timeless aesthetic and commitment to diverse storytelling. As the former editor of Vogue India, she dramatically expanded its global influence, championing cultural stroytelling and redefining its visual language. Born in India and raised in New Zealand, she founded INPRINT, a multidisciplinary publishing platform, and previously worked at Vogue Australia. With a global perspective, Kapoor continues to amplify meaningful narratives that reflect the world’s evolving cultural landscape.