Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurates India Art Architecture and Design Biennale 2023 at Red Fort.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the India Art Architecture and Design Biennale 2023, at Red Fort, Delhi, on Saturday. The event brings together artists, designers, and architects from India to showcase innovations in art, design, and architecture.

SHARE THIS

From ancient temples and the stepwells to the gardens and modern icons of India, the India Art Architecture and Design Biennale 2023 (IAADB’23) organized by the Ministry of Culture has kicked of today at the iconic Red Fort at Delhi. The maiden Biennale was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi yesterday.

Source: © Mugdha Sinha, IAS, Joint Secretary GLAM, Culture, GoI / Instagram
Source: © Mugdha Sinha, IAS, Joint Secretary GLAM, Culture, GoI / Instagram 

Starting today the exhibitions, panel discussions, student Biennale, workshops, and art bazaar will be open to the public from 9 December to 15 December. The Biennale features keynote addresses on each day by international artists, architects, and designers besides the cultural programs. The pavilions, part of the Biennale, will be on display for public until 31 March 2024.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurates India Art Architecture and Design Biennale 2023 at Red Fort. 2
Image Source: PIB, India

Along with launching a special stamp to commemorate the occasion, Prime Minister Narendra Modi also announced the ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat Centre for Design’. He emphasized the importance of freedom of thought and working in one’s own way for the flourishing of art, architecture, and culture. He stated that a society with a tradition of debate and dialogue automatically promotes diversity and welcomes and supports all forms of diversity.

Speaking at the event, he stated that there was a need to establish an identity for Indian cultural projects like IAADB. The government is actively working towards formalizing international cultural initiatives and building a contemporary framework inspired by events held in cities like Venice, São Paulo, Singapore, Sydney, and Dubai.

Forums like India Art, Architecture and Design Biennale are vital to celebrating and nurturing our rich cultural heritage.

Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India

This week-long event will revolve around seven themes, with each day dedicated to a specific theme with a corresponding coffee table publication – Pravesh (Doors of India), Bagh-e-Bahar (Gardens of India), Sampravah (Baolis or the step-wells of India), Sthaypatya (Temples of India), Vismaya (Architectural Icons of Independent India), Deshaj (Indigenous Design), and Samatva (Women in Architecture and Design).  

Source: © Mugdha Sinha, IAS, Joint Secretary GLAM, Culture, GoI / Instagram
Source: © Mugdha Sinha, IAS, Joint Secretary GLAM, Culture, GoI / Instagram

The event is curated by the National Gallery of Modern Art, along with the National Council of Science Museums, the Archaeological Survey of India, the Lalit Kala Akademi, the Council of Architecture, and the Outreach Department of the Ministry of Education. Besides this, the Ministry had announced an open call on their social media inviting artists and curators to submit their work for IAADB’23. With about 560 queries and 260 submissions, 150 selected entries will be on display at the venue. A Student Biennale – Samunnati, will be organized from the 9 December to 15 December at the Lalit Kala Akademi.

Smt. Mugdha Sinha, IAS, shared that there was a need to make art, architecture and design accessible to people at large, and this Biennale plays this role.

There is a gap between the elite and masses when it comes to this field, and through this event, the endeavour is to reduce the gap that exists between elite connoisseurs and mass audiences. 

Mugdha Sinha, IAS, Joint Secretary GLAM, Culture, GoI 

During the Museum Expo 2023, which was held in May this year, the Culture Ministry signed five Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) with the cities of Mumbai, Kolkata, Delhi, Ahmedabad, and Varanasi, designating cultural spaces for citizens. At a press conference at the National Museum held in November, Minister of State for Culture and External Affairs, Smt. Meenakshi Lekhi announced that the Biennale will showcase a diverse range of traditional artisans, contemporary designers, curators, and thought leaders.

The Biennale is an innovative initiative to celebrate India’s rich artistic heritage, spanning ancient, modern, contemporary, and tech-driven art, architecture, and design, as stated by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi.  

Like what we publish?

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent Posts

Massing during construction, retaining the exposed concrete facade composition, cross columns and profiled beams. Archival collection of Tibet House, 1977. Accessed in 2026

Brutalist India | Tibet House, New Delhi

As part of Brutalist India series Bhawna Dandona writes about Tibet House in New Delhi which is a non-profit cultural centre dedicated to preserving Tibetan heritage, founded in 1965 at the Dalai Lama’s request. The current building’s foundation was laid in 1974, with architect Shivnath Prasad.

Read More »
Vivek Rawal

Architecture, Power, and the Poor | “As a profession, architecture lacks moral position and has become complicit in the neoliberal dispossession of the poor.”—Vivek Rawal

Vivek Rawal argues that architecture—as a profession—is structurally aligned with political and economic power rather than social justice. He critiques how architectural education and practice prioritise developers and real estate over communities, turning housing into a market commodity. Even movements like sustainability and participation, he says, often become tools for elite consumption rather than genuine empowerment. True moral reform, according to Rawal, would mean architects relinquishing control and enabling community-led design and housing decisions.

Read More »
The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG 1

The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG

The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG’s response to nature, memory, and the spirit of place. The design takes “Catching” as its spiritual core, emphasizing the relationship between the architecture and the surrounding rice field landscape.

Read More »
Gender. Hysteria. Architecture. | What Might Care Look Like If It Were Not Afraid of Women? 4

Gender. Hysteria. Architecture. | What Might Care Look Like If It Were Not Afraid of Women?

What kinds of spaces exist where women can breathe without being watched? If hysteria no longer exists as a diagnosis, why does its architecture remain? Aditi A., through her research study as a part of the CEPT Writing Architecture course, in the third and last chapter of this series follows the spatial logics that developed to manage hysteria, which continue in the contemporary environments of care safety, and everyday life. If the diagnosis has been discredited, what explains the persistence of its walls?

Read More »
Kirtee Shah on architecture profession at CEPT University alumni meet

“… the way architecture [profession] is perceived and practised, it needs to move from the pedestal to the ground.”—Kirtee Shah

In his presentation at the CEPT Alumni Meet, in January 2026, Kirtee Shah offers “something to think about” for the architects and planners regarding the future of architecture profession. He urges architects to relearn and refocus on service, sustainability, and inclusivity while addressing urban chaos, poor housing, rural neglect, and climate challenges.

Read More »

Featured Publications

New Release

Stories that provoke enquiry into built environment

www.architecture.live

Subscribe & Join a Community of Lakhs of Readers

We Need Your Support

To be able to continue the work we are doing and keeping it free for all, we request our readers to support in every way possible.

Your contribution, no matter the size, helps our small team sustain this space. Thank you for your support.

Contribute using UPI

Contribute Using Cards