Sculptures

An illustration of a praying mantis sitting on a tree branch, eating a bird while a squirrel and a mouse are hanging from the branch below. A glimpse of a Yashika Sugandh's artwork.

In Matar, an eight-foot sculpture crafted from fiber resin and nylon, Sugandh monumentalizes the humble pea pod, revealing it as a universe unto itself: a dwelling place, a cocoon of possibility. The work emerged from a spontaneous moment of attention, characteristic of an artist who observes “all little-big things” in her surroundings with sustained reverence. Through radical shifts in scale, she arrests our gaze, demanding we reconsider what we deem insignificant.

Yashika Sugandh hugging her colourful art installation - Matar, resembling a giant pea pod emerging from a large pink egg with purple spots. The background features a yellow and white wall with a clock, a framed picture, and a plant.
Colorful illustration of a flying hummingbird with outstretched wings. A glimpse of Yashika Sugandh's artwork: Taking Back What Belongs To Them.

Yashika Sugandh’s sculptural practice extends her intimate dialogue with the natural world into three-dimensional form, where organic matter becomes both subject and medium. Working with fiber resin, nylon, and acrylic, she constructs monumental interventions that translate the meticulous tenderness of her miniature-inspired paintings into spatial experience. Her sculptures don’t merely represent nature; they embody its quiet resilience and fragile interdependence.

Yashika Sugandh in white attire looking at her colourful sculpture - Sukoon in her exhibition at Bikaner House, New Delhi, with abstract artworks hanging on the white walls.

Central to Sugandh’s sculptural vision is her use of found natural materials: twigs, wasp nests, butterfly cocoons. She collaborates with nature rather than simply depicting it. This approach positions her work within contemporary conversations about environmental degradation and the loss of natural habitats, yet her sculptures resist didacticism.

Instead, they pose gentle, radical questions: Who truly belongs? What constitutes intrusion? In a world of rapid urbanization, her sculptures become meditative sites where viewers confront their skewed stewardship of the planet.

A person is climbing a tree using a ladder with a large yellow and red spotted lizard hanging near the ladder. A glimpse of Yashika Sugandh's artwork: Can I Grow Back Again 2.