The Ultimate Travel Guide for Fort Kochi Itinerary Planning 2026
Plan your Fort Kochi visit with day by day itineraries for 2026. Morning cafes, heritage walks, sunset times & night plans all in one place.
Imagine this. It's 1947 Delhi. A woman in a sari is cycling through the capital with a nine-kilogram
Discover ‘You I Could Not Save’ at Cube Art Space, Kochi-Muziris Biennale 2025. Explore Gandhi’s final 10,000 miles alongside works by 10 iconic Kerala artists.
He never saw it installed. The iron cages were built. The actor stepped inside. The photographer shot for hours. But Vivan Sundaram — one of India's most important artists — died on March 29, 2023, before his final work could be shown to the world. Now, that work has come to My Beloved Fort Kochi.
The Students' Biennale at Kochi shows you what Indian art looks like in five years. Here are five artists you should see.
A dot matrix printer screeches in the corner of a Mattancherry warehouse. Slowly, it spits out a long scroll of paper — observations, thoughts, fragments of conversation between artists who may never meet in person.
A Kenyan artist draws on Dutch walls. A student builds a shelter for her child-bride mother. David Hall is unmissable.
Inside the Biennale's most layered show - where India's first woman photojournalist meets a freedom fighters' jail.
A marginalized drum reclaims the stage. Taala Tamate brings rhythm, resistance, and joy to Aspinwall House in Fort kochi.
An old refrigerator hums in a dark room. Inside its freezer, frozen fish and fungi slowly decay behind glass. Walk through every room of Aspinwall House at the Kochi Biennale. Here's what you'll see
Imagine a small bronze figure locked inside a museum case. She has stood still for thousands of years. But what if she could suddenly breathe, sweat, and move? This performance does not just look at history. It wakes it up.
The British arrived and took over toward the end of the 18th century. In 1806, they destroyed the remaining fort walls - but left the bungalow standing. Typical British move: flatten the fort, keep the pretty house.
Albanian artist Driant Zeneli screens a 21-minute opera-film shot inside the brutalist Parliament of Dhaka, Bangladesh. A white peacock who cannot fly falls in love with his own tear.
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