





The Inner Amrit/ Amritanatara
This ceramic piece holds a kind of beauty that feels uneven and
unfathomable. The base is a divine merger of different blues— turquoise and deep oceanic tones — evoking the waters stirred during the Samudra Manthan, when the Devas and Rakshasas churned the ocean and divided its treasures among themselves. That very struggle, that tension, is reflected in the brown, textured upper layers — raw and almost scar-like. And yet, the inner whitish layer suggests the aura of amrit — pure, divine, unclaimed. It didn't belong to either side completely, yet somehow, it connects us all.
This ceramic piece holds a kind of beauty that feels uneven and
unfathomable. The base is a divine merger of different blues— turquoise and deep oceanic tones — evoking the waters stirred during the Samudra Manthan, when the Devas and Rakshasas churned the ocean and divided its treasures among themselves. That very struggle, that tension, is reflected in the brown, textured upper layers — raw and almost scar-like. And yet, the inner whitish layer suggests the aura of amrit — pure, divine, unclaimed. It didn't belong to either side completely, yet somehow, it connects us all.