e
S
E
R
E
S
M
E
U
rhea
parakh

Backpacking & Outdoors

CLICK TO CHECK OUT JO NAKASHIMA HERE!CLICK ON THE BOOK TO BUY!

explorations

Client: Sunshine Himalayan Cottages
Year: 2019
Type: To design a logo for the Trout Fishing district of Tirthan Valley, Himachal Pradesh, India.
Client: Chimera Plants
Year: 2021
Type: To design a logo for a plant shop in Groningen, The Netherlands.
Client: Calvin Simmons Theatre
Year: 2021
Type: Design a logo for the Calvin Simmons Theatre, San Francisco, USA.
Client: Artem in Motion
Year: 2021
Type: To design a logo for the Contemporary Art Instagram page "Artem in Motion".
Client: Indian Law College, Pune.
Year: 2020
Type: To design advertisement posters for the Tech-IP Week at Indian Law College, Pune.
Client: MILT Leadership Foundation
Year: 2018
Type: To design a t-shirt graphic for a sports event organized by MILT Leadership Foundation, Pune, India.
Client: Chordia Organics
Year: 2022
Type: Branding and Label Design for Chordia Organics, an organic products company.
THE CLAY

Submissive. Yet, unapologetic. It does not ask too many questions. It somehow feels that the clay is a feminine entity. With every push & pull, the clay I hold foolishly bears the pressures of my hand. I say, foolishly, as I feel it shouldn’t. It shouldn’t bear the prints I leave on it. It shouldn’t unveil the robe of pain I slyly pass onto it. Every gesture. Every mark. Every experience.
THE CLAY THAT SPINS

Pottery makes me calm. It helps me focus on something. You keep doing it, it keeps happening. It’s rather intuitive. It's hypnotic. It makes me feel something. As I see myself create a small dimple, digging deep into the clay, I feel my mind alter with it. The symmetry, that bears every stroke of the finger, records my emotion and traps it. The change is immediate. I’m still confused about what stirs up at the wheel. Why I feel what I feel. It’s aiming towards a goal, but not quite thinking about it.
THE CLAY THAT BEARS

I was given a task. “Make Straight Cylinders.” But every time I took the pot off the wheel, I had this sudden urge to play with it. Push it, tear the wet clay, pull it, pinch it, break it. This desire of meddling with the original form, it said something.  It probably reflects how the mind urges to break rules, conceptions and assumptions. I feel that the act of throwing is rather empowering. It is an act of holding a sense of power, to have it bend, stretch, fold, mold just the way you desire. It’s a subtle ‘manipulation’ of sorts. A kind of manipulation that lets you leave a mark on the world. It is rather patriarchal. Or the call of repressed femininity.
THE CLAY, THE MIRROR

The clay assumed my touch, and formed a beautiful cylinder. As I got it off the wheel, I realized what a mistake it had been to not let the clay run free. I then realized, that it is this desire of mine to break free, that I want the clay to adopt in the face of every push. I’m shaping the pots, yet ready to destroy them. I’m constricting myself, drawing borders, erecting walls for myself; so I can bear the sight of it getting it destroyed, thus destroying my own barriers. I’m trying to prove that I’m breaking free, when in fact, I weld the very cage to suit my needs. I had let myself free through the clay.
THE CLAY THAT TALKS

As my fingers pass through the clay… it talks back to me. It’s unapologetic. It fights back… then this beautiful object emerges. The clay talks to me. It makes me feel present. As it records every subtle movement, it also reminds me that I cannot take it for granted; cannot overdo anything, cannot push it more than it can take. It does fight back. It listens to me. Everything else washes away with its presence. It sucks up all that I feel, and very gently presents it to me, asking me to look within.
I AM THE CLAY

It’s teaching me to be like itself. Be strong enough to bear the exterior, but also maintain a core. Vulnerable, yet tough. It’s tough to maintain a core, when you don’t know which ingredients could taste delicious together. It’s tough to maintain a core, when you don’t know if you should quickly whisk the ingredients or let them rest in the fridge. Once the clay tells me what I need in the recipe, I’ll share it with you.
THE CLAY I DEFEND

I AM THE CLAY; And so I defend. I don’t want to choke the clay. I want to be its cheerleader. I want it to blossom. I don’t want to choke myself. I want to be my own cheerleader. I want to blossom. Does it matter if you leave the pot, or the clay, as is? Why can’t I leave it raw, without firing it to make its composition permanent? I like the way it looks. Like a baby, just off the wheel. Unpolished. Unrefined. Like an innocent child.  I won’t say that sprinkling a little rouge on the cheek, painting your lips a dark maroon would make one look ugly. But appreciate the wrinkles, I’d say. The freckles that adorn your face. It makes you look real.
01

Are We Human? Notes on an Archaeology of Design
By Beatriz Colomina  

Genre: Design Essays


"The human becomes human in seeing itself in the things it makes, or seeing its possibility in those things. So the human doesn't simply invent tools. Tools invent the human. More precisely, tool and human produce each other. The artifacts that prosthetically expand thought and reach are what make the human human."
02

Man’s Search for Meaning
By Victor E. Frankl

Genre: Psychology, Holocaust Novel, Philosophy


“I recommend that the Statue of Liberty on the East Coast be supplemented by a Statue of Responsiblity on the West Coast.”
03

The Forty Rules of Love
By Elif Shafak

Genre: Literary Fiction, Sufism


‘When you have both eyes closed to the world, a third eye opens in your heart.’
04

The Hidden Life of Trees
By Peter Wohlleben

Genre: Non-fiction, Environment


“It seems trees need their rest just as much as we do, and sleep deprivation is as detrimental to trees as it is to us.”
05

Aghora I - At the Left Hand of God
By Robert E. Svoboda

Genre: Occult, Spirituality, Hinduism


“Just remember that learning is also a form of Maya. It is very valuable, no doubt, but you can still become attached to it, just as you can to any form of Maya."
06

3 Cups of Tea
By David Oliver Relin and Greg Mortenson

Genre: Memoir, Social Innovation


"The first time you share tea with a Balti, you are a stranger. The second time you take tea, you are an honored guest. The third time you share a cup of tea, you become family, and for our family, we are prepared to do anything, even die."
07

A Whole New Mind
By Daniel H. Pink

Genre: Psychology


“We are moving from an economy and a society built on the logical, linear, computerlike capabilities of the Information Age to an economy and a society built on the inventive, empathic, big-picture capabilities of what’s rising in its place, the Conceptual Age.”
08

The White Tiger
By Aravind Adiga

Genre: Picaresque novel


“It is an ancient and venerated custom of people in my country to start a story by praying to a Higher Power. I guess, Your Excellency, that I too should start off by kissing some god's arse."
"Which god's arse, though? There are so many choices. See, the Muslims have one god. The Christians have three gods. And we Hindus have 36,000,004 divine arses to choose from.”
09

The White Mughals
By William Dalrymple

Genre: Narrative History


“India has always had a strange way with her conquerors. In defeat, she beckons them in, then slowly seduces, assimilates and transforms them. Over the centuries, many powers have defeated Indian armies; but none has ever proved immune to this capacity of the subcontinent to somehow reverse the current of colonization, and to mould those who attempt to subjugate her. So vast is India, and so uniquely resilient and deeply rooted are her intertwined social and religious institutions, that all foreign intruders are sooner or later either shaken off or absorbed.”
10

The Housekeeper and the Professor
By Yoko Ogawa

Genre: Fiction


“A problem isn't finished just because you've found the right answer.”

“The room was filled with a kind of stillness. Not simply an absence of noise, but an accumulation of layers of silence...”
11

The Fall
By Albert Camus

Genre: Philosophical Novel

“Men are never convinced of your reasons, of your sincerity, of the seriousness of your sufferings, except by your death. So long as you are alive, your case is doubtful; you have a right only to their skepticism.”

“Today we are always as ready to judge as we are to fornicate.”