
It was Okakura Kakuzō, the Japanese art historian, who sparked the bard's interest in Japan during his first visit to Calcutta in 1902. Eventually, Tagore would go on to forge a lifelong relationship with the country, whose culture would deeply fascinate him. And that, in turn, would fascinate Bandyopadhyay. His home in West Bengal's Santiniketan is set in and around a garden of memories, stillness, and melancholy-inspired by Japan.
Ultimately, all his roads led him to seek out the country's wabi-sabi sensibilities even in his own home, which he built in six months in 2018. The house, however, is simply extension of the garden that lies at the centre of the space he calls home. It's where Bandyopadhyay's dreams have taken root, and have planted him firmly where he truly belongs-a home of paradoxes that's complete in its incompleteness.
Nilanjan Bandyopadhyay is a multihyphenate. He’s a researcher, calligraphy and tea artist, poet, writer, and manager of the Rabindra Bhavana, or Santiniketan Museum, in Visva Bharati, Bolpur. Even though Bandyopadhyay shuffles multiple hats in a day, he wears each of them with an ease that stems from the calm that swathes his home, Kokoro—the Japanese word for heart—which he designed as an homage to his love for Japan.
Love, however, doesn’t quite effectively convey how he feels about Japanese culture, an aspect of which has also been the subject of his PhD research for the past few years. Bandyopadhyay, therefore, attempted to crystallize his reverence for the Japanese way of life into Kokoro, a home that was built around its garden.
This story is from the November - December 2024 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November - December 2024 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

A VERTICAL GARDEN
Global firm SOM’s first residential tower in India comes up on the charming Carmichael Road in Mumbai; its warm cedar wood facade dotted with greenery

BRASS RELIEF
Payal Khandwala's debut home collection reinvents small everyday objects with fine, handcrafted details

ODE TO STILLNESS
Kunal Maniar's Shanti Bench, weighing 4500 kgs, combines five precious metals to create a behemoth, monolithic piece of furniture

Coming Home to Morena House
Nestled in Mumbai's leafy Malabar Hill, this residential tower by JSW Realty is mindful of both history and climate. Designed by AD100 Serie Architects, it juxtaposes classic Art Deco elements with quiet luxury and evokes the charm of old-school bungalows in contemporary apartment living

HOT PROPERTY
London-based Becky Fatemi sold £400million of prime property last year. Her client base? A competitive international set who covet homes that aren't even for sale yet

FINDING & CREATING a HOME
Priti Mahajan reflects on her journey of moving from Mumbai to Dubai, where her home has become a sanctuary, filled with her family's travels, memories, and the life they've built together

ARTIST IBBY NJOYAS PSYCHEDELIC INSTALLATION, THEORY OF COLOUR, MADE IN COLLABORATION WITH JAGUAR, SHINES AT MIAMI ART WEEK.
Colour appears as a sentient entity in Ibby Njoya's work. For the Cameroonian British artist and spatial designer, who burst onto the fashion scene for his experimental and often provocative visualisations, every hue carries an innate energy and elicits emotion.

SUCHI REDDY CREATES A FOREST OF COLOUR FOR THE LAUNCH OF ASIAN PAINTS' CHROMACOSM-THE WORLD'S LARGEST ARCHITECTURAL COLOUR SYSTEM.
Imagine walking through a library with thousands of colour swatches instead of books. Suchi Reddy of New York-based architecture, design and public art studio Reddymade creates that experience in her latest art installation for Asian Paints.

A 17TH-CENTURY VILLA IN FLORENCE, DRESSED IN A PALETTE OF CORAL, SAGE AND SALMON, IS ARCHITECT SHONAN PURIE TREHAN'S HOME AWAY FROM HOME.
It has been nearly two years since architect Shonan Purie Trehan shifted to Florence.

LUNAR MISSION
Minotti's Supermoon seating system gets a curvy update from interior designer Giampiero Tagliaferri