Updated On: 24 September, 2023 01:11 PM IST | Patna, Bihar | Jane Borges
A first-of-its-kind biennale in Patna is not just providing a showcase platform to museums across the world, it’s also making a compelling case for Bihar’s rich heritage and history

Udayraj Gadnis’s paintings titled Sun Series, and Shailendra Kumar’s photographs documenting Chhath Puja in Bihar, are part of the newly-inaugurated show Suryakal, as part of the Bihar Museum Biennale
For the aesthetes of Mumbai, whose condescension is mostly the result of where they are located in the Indian urbanscape, a museum biennale in “remote” Patna might seem like a far-fetched idea. “Who goes there?” we were asked. We didn’t have the answer to that, not until we took a 2.5-hour flight arriving at the inconspicuous Jay Prakash Narayan International Airport—ordinary-looking, like the rest of the city, which is packed chaotically with smaller buildings needing paint, and cycle rickshaws that jostle for space with two- and four-wheelers.
