Kisalay Vora, best known for his public art works, has now begun a campaign to challenge the notion that bangles are symbols of weakness for they are often used as objects of shame and derision accompanied by the slur.
"Why bangles? What's weak about bangles? It's like saying: You are like women, therefore you are weak. Why are women saying this? What cultural message are they sending out when they do this?" asks the artist.
"I have heard many women saying 'ladki ki tarah mat roh' (Don't cry like a girl), or 'Yeh meri beti nahin, mera beta hai'(this is not my daughter but my son) or the ultimate: gifting boxes of bangles to men in power, as a way of telling them: you are weak and spineless. For me, that's a very disturbing image," says Kisalay.
The artist's works "Two Sisters", "Pride", "Distortions in the mirror are deliberate" draws attention to the subliminal messages embedded with these oft repeated and demeaning phrases.
His works on this theme represent the dichotomy of power and weakness, pride and shame, courage and cowardice - from employing a spine to represent the strength of a person while simultaneously using it as a stand to display bangles.