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The Mumbai Urban Art Festival is an event organised by St+Art India with the support of Asian Paints. The mission of the three-month festival, which closed on February , is to make art accessible to a highly various public, eliminating the formality of conventional spaces for art and bringing together a plethora of different artists and professionals. Interdisciplinary projects including wall paintings, experiential exhibitions, immersive installations and a variety of programming in various different parts of the city offered an opportunity to rediscover little-known routes and forgotten stories in the seaside metropolis.
The presence of works designed for people with disabilities, representation of the LGBTQIA+ community, catalogues in braille and initiatives for stray animals gave the Mumbai Urban Art Festival a focus on Phone Number List inclusiveness, ensuring the accessibility of art in all its many forms, because people can easily become overwhelmed when visiting the usual places of art, such as museums and galleries. The installation "The Plastic We Live With“ by Spanish artistic collective Luzinterruptus is definitely one of these universally accessible works. With the support of the Mumbai Port Authority, Spectrum Impact and the Embassy of Spain, the installation was set up in Evelyn House, an Art Deco building in Colaba, a lively part of the city by the sea, with a beautiful waterfront walkway.

The goal was to encourage broader conversation about Mumbai’s relationship with waste and recycling, reflecting on urbanisation and over-consumption. According to the artists: „We wanted to graphically show the excess of plastic that is around us, a recurring issue in our work and in life, since almost everything we consume is made of it or wrapped in it or we eat it in the tiny particles found in meat and fish, not to mention the fact that it is also in the air we breathe.“ How to convey the idea that we must reduce our use of plastic, especially in the „disposable“ products that end up polluting every corner of our planet, as revealed by the huge islands of plastic floating in our oceans? An emblematic product is the plastic bag, which is, fortunately, increasingly being replaced by alternative, reusable solutions such as cloth bags or bags made of renewable materials such as paper.
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