House of Thinai’s travelling exhibition links Madras checks and generative art technology

House of Thinai’s travelling exhibition links Madras checks and generative art technology

In late August this year, as the city was commemorating Madras Month, a fortnight-long exhibition titled ‘Past Forward’ concluded at DakshinaChitra that took a deep dive into ‘the trans-oceanic cultural legacy and future of Madras Checks’. “The exhibition merged traditional weaving techniques with generative models, enhanced by computational interlace algorithms, creating a unique platform for visitors to interact and co-create,” says Karthik Prema Rajakumar, founder-partner, House of Thinai — known for its handcrafted furniture and decor — and also the brain behind Past Forward. 

Now a travelling exhibition, Karthik, 28, says the project is (supported by the Center for Collaborative Arts and Media, at Yale and the TSAI Center for Innovative Thinking at Yale) in collaboration with designer Vignesh Hari Krishnan, a Studio Fellow at Yale University. The exhibition will come to Bengaluru in January 2025 and a few other Indian cities before concluding at Yale late next year.

A visitor at ‘Past Forward’

A visitor at ‘Past Forward’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

“This research initiative explores, documents, and continually observes the connection between craft communities practising Madras checks, and generative art technology,” he says. He adds that visitors at the DakshinaChitra exhibition designed their own Madras Checks patterns and colours, “which will be included in the exhibition’s expanding online digital collection”.

These designs, says Karthik, will be co-created with handloom artisans and will travel to North America for a parallel exhibition. “We’ve developed an algorithmic generative model (https://www.madras-checks.com/generator) and made it live. Now, using this design generator we are looking forward to co-produce newer designs with the Madras Checks weaving artisans which is underway, and hopefully use them as furniture upholstery,” he explains. 

Furniture at House of Thinai

Furniture at House of Thinai
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

This exhibition is the latest addition to Thinai Foundation’s design archives that comprises research on craft and its communities, folk worship and lore.  Karthik calls House of Thinai a “research-manufacture unit”, that he runs with Mano Ranjan who looks after the day-to-day operations and logistics of the studio, and Sheikh Ahmed,the Foundation, and design partner.

“We occasionally have individuals on board to help us with textiles, patterns, and other requirements ,” he says, adding that they work out of their studio at Red Hills. Their latest launch is a contemporary day-bed, a take on ‘kaithu-kattil’ or ‘charppai’. “From ideating the design to identifying the artisans and materials (wood, brass, organic cotton belt, and cashew shell oil), the process of its creation with artisans was exciting,” says Kartik. 

(L-R) Karthik Prema Rajakumar, Mano Ranjan, Ezhil Madhii, Sanjana Balaji, and Sheikh Ahmed

(L-R) Karthik Prema Rajakumar, Mano Ranjan, Ezhil Madhii, Sanjana Balaji, and Sheikh Ahmed
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Elaborating on the recently-launched jamakkalam series, he adds, “The idea was to combine fine wood craftsmanship and textile artistry to design a product that would be equally utilitarian, as aesthetic. This led to circling back to the time-worn easy chair typology of furniture. The collapsible nature of furniture is designed to fold into a single silhouette thereby making it a frame in which the textile art is fitted. This could ultimately be placed on a wall or hung up on a vertical surface, while also being an easy chair when needed,” he says.

For the  easy-chair typology that he calls, Trustfall, the team worked with weavers to document and understand the techniques of creating, of how a piece comes together, and how patterns are created. “We were lucky to work with Subaz from L B Singh Center at Bhavani who was open to experimenting with newer colours as well. Thus began the collaboration to co-create newer patterns, colours, and variations to produce jamakkalams.” Today, Subaz is now exporting these jamakkalam designs, that Kartik calls “a bonus of the research and co-creation initiative”

An easy chair featuring jamakkalam

An easy chair featuring jamakkalam
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

The firm also undertakes private and custom projects; 6-8 weeks for small, bespoke commissions, and upto 24 weeks for larger orders that are delivered in phases. An ongoing one includes getting upholstery embroidered by the Lambadi tribal woman artisans at Porgai Artisans Association that will be placed on an upholstered lounge seater. “The chair is specifically crafted and finished to provide both comfort and at the same time enhance the embroidery designs of the woman artisans. We’ve been on it for three months now, and will launch it soon,” he says, adding, “Another project is our experimentation with organic cotton and natural dyes.” 

A chair crafted at House of Thinai

A chair crafted at House of Thinai
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

But the one project his team is waiting to crack is furniture that blends mild steel and palmyra crafts of the Chettinad region. “This has been in the works for two years now, and it is tough because wood has been our go-to medium with everything and this mix requires something else. With R&D underway, I would say we are 70-80% there and hopefully, by this year-end, we will crack it completely,” concludes Karthik. 

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