The show titled "Not My Life: Artists Respond", builds on the film by Oscar nominated Robert Bilheimer who has shot the documentary in a dozen countries across five continents.
While Indian artist Kanchan Chander has brought out a collection of artworks since 1978, the French artist Dominique Gribot Carroz has created works using recycled materials and waste.
"My collection is from 1978 onwards and focuses on human trafficking and girl child abuse. So when Dominique decided to do an art exhibition I pulled out my collection," says Chander, who has been a painter since the past four decades.
"The exhibition is just an attempt to raise awareness amongst people so that more people come forward. The paintings talk about physic of a woman after she goes through abuses and atrocities and human trafficking," says Chander.
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French artist Dominique Gribot Carroz termed human trafficking to be a global phenomenon and a vexatious problem which needs to be addressed with the policy makers demanding hard and lasting solutions to curb the malice.
The art exhibition features certain sections expressing
myriads emotions of women facing human trafficking. Different faction on the art walls convey hard-hitting messages and comprises a story to be told.
Other than the section "Live and Let Live" 2015, the walls at the Alliance Francaise the venue for the exhibition have been crowded with different forms of paintings titled "Torn Lives" made from charcoal, pastels and waste by Dominique and a series titled "Torso Landscape" made in acrylics and preserved from 1996.
"The Devil Men" made with a woodcut technique and preserved since 1979 along with a series themed "If my flowers could be pink" catches the attention of the spectator and asks several perplexing questions concerning human trafficking.
The exhibition is set to be on view till November 30 for the audience with a special screening of the film "Not My Life" on November 29.