What Remains

$125.00

Photographed at Lalbagh Fort, this image layers Mughal architecture against the dense, living city that has grown around it. The softened textures and weathered surface echo the passage of time—how history endures not in isolation, but alongside daily life. Once a symbol of empire, the fort now stands quietly amid movement, growth, and change. This photograph reflects on belonging, inheritance, and the stories that persist long after their origins have faded.

Each photo transfer begins as an original photograph. Through a slow, tactile transfer process, the image is lifted from its original surface and re-embedded onto paper, allowing imperfections, texture, and erosion to become part of the final work.

No two transfers are ever the same. Variations in pressure, timing, and surface interaction create subtle shifts in areas of softness, loss, or distortion that speak to memory, migration, and the fragility of what we try to hold onto.

This is a one-of-one piece. Once completed, it cannot be replicated.

  • Size: 8×10 inches

  • Medium: Photo transfer using archival materials

  • Signed on the back

  • Unframed

Created slowly, intentionally, and without automation. This work honors process as much as outcome.

Photographed at Lalbagh Fort, this image layers Mughal architecture against the dense, living city that has grown around it. The softened textures and weathered surface echo the passage of time—how history endures not in isolation, but alongside daily life. Once a symbol of empire, the fort now stands quietly amid movement, growth, and change. This photograph reflects on belonging, inheritance, and the stories that persist long after their origins have faded.

Each photo transfer begins as an original photograph. Through a slow, tactile transfer process, the image is lifted from its original surface and re-embedded onto paper, allowing imperfections, texture, and erosion to become part of the final work.

No two transfers are ever the same. Variations in pressure, timing, and surface interaction create subtle shifts in areas of softness, loss, or distortion that speak to memory, migration, and the fragility of what we try to hold onto.

This is a one-of-one piece. Once completed, it cannot be replicated.

  • Size: 8×10 inches

  • Medium: Photo transfer using archival materials

  • Signed on the back

  • Unframed

Created slowly, intentionally, and without automation. This work honors process as much as outcome.