The 12-hour long event wooed over estimated 4,50,000 people to the prime location of Central Business District (CBD) showcasing music, art, theatre, sports, design, film, fashion and performance under several themes including one named for India as 'Sita's Garden.
Sita's Garden was curated by the festival director Andrew Walsh, renowned producer Kate Ben-Tovin and Melbourne raised Bollywood star Pallavi Sharda.
The theme tapped into several aspects of Indian culture. A luminous floating lotus pond was set up on the iconic Yarra River where onlookers enjoyed Bollywood and classical forms of dances while its banks created a Little India that had Indian streetscapes.
He said "the Indian diaspora which is a colourful and interesting community..Then purely by chance, with the cricket on with India playing the following day, [it] just cemented that whole idea."
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Sharda said Indians were an important part and contributed significantly to the rich culture of Melbourne as well as Australia.
"It is important to recognise that," she said stressing that the city's biggest cultural event did not include the Indian theme just for the sake of it but it was all so logical to do that now.
"It was the first time that different elements of India were presented to the mainstream Australian audiences," Sharda said.
"It was imperative to bring classical forms of Indian dances also apart from popular Bollywood culture," she added.
An extension of the water activities into Birrarung Marr, Bollywood murals, projections, Indian street food, and a welcome to the rising sun with a sun salutation sequence, were experienced by all in one single night.
Apart from Sita's Garden, the festival ran in other eight precinct named as The Big Chill, Wonderland, 4 elements, Northern Lights, River of Gold, Tears before Dawn, The Engines and Keyframes.