Rebecca Reubens believes in creating systems that will bring sustainability into mainstream design.
What awakened your interest in sustainability?
RR: I studied Industrial Design at NID, majoring in Furniture and Interiors. For most of my time there, I wanted to be a mainstream industrial designer. Then MP Ranjan coerced me into working with bamboo and with craft-groups. I was astounded by the poverty in terms of money and infrastructure and the richness in terms of so much else – craft, technique, culture, producer-base, material palette, etc. I decided to work for people who most needed design, but couldn’t afford it. The obvious next choice was working in the development sector, so I could do this, and still sustain myself. I joined INBAR and stayed with them for seven years.
During this time, I took a long hard look at the development sector and realized that the system didn’t make designers (or anybody else) accountable for the funds spent and for the outcome or even the output. I wanted to work in a system which was more real – where I was more accountable and more committed to doing better work because I had more skin in the game.
How did Rhizome come about?
RR: In 2009 I started Rhizome in Delhi to see whether sustainability could be sustainable. It is a for-profit sustainability design firm - where sustainability is not linked to public funds, or a typical not-for-profit operational and funding structure for sustenance. I wanted to see whether I could transition from the ‘sustainable design’ model of the West to a sustainability design model for the rest of the world (including the West). Rhizome was born to be the vehicle for this investigation.
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A Legacy Continues
Leveraging the success of his family's export business, Naman Jain is focusing on creating a retail presence in India
Creating KAIRA
Long fascinated by Indian fabric, Nikita Gupta has launched an attractive line of contemporary apparel in traditional block prints
Stories faces tell
Aditya Narula dabbled in various vocations before he realized portraiture was the best way to express the fascinating complexities of the people he encountered along the way
time tested DESIGN
Surrounded by art and architecture as a child, Sarah Sham went on to take the family antiques business in a new direction through her interior design venture
DANGEROUSLY DELICATE
Kavya Potluri's attention to minute detail is what sets her intricate and unconventional jewelry apart
music as muse
A multidisplinary visual artist, Aaron Pinto, also known as Kidsquidy, has had an interesting journey that started with MTV and has him now working on everything from music videos to stage design
DEVELOPING A DISCOURSE
Documentary photographer Taha Ahmad believes his work has a greater purpose than merely being admired by a select audience for its esthetic value. It's when people are able to see the underside of society and understand the prevailing social injustice that the work tries to reveal that it is truly worthwhile.
Tiny little Stories
Creating miniature worlds allows Ruchika Nambiar to continue to play childlike games of make-believe
The Richness Of Handmade
Amit Vijaya and Richard Pandav are committed to bringing together many hands and hearts through their clothing label ‘amrich’
The perfect balance
Aniruddh Mehta is as much graphic designer as visual artist, and he tries to do justice to both through his work at Studio Bigfat