Metro Collection
![]() |
![]() NEW HUDSON PARK Metro Collection KING DUVET COVER Taupe Brown $88.00 Time Remaining: 15d 19h 45m Buy It Now for only: $88.00 |
![]() Betty Boop Plush Mink Blanket Collections Queen Size 76x94 $32.50 Time Remaining: 27d 15h 47m Buy It Now for only: $32.50 |
![]() HOTEL COLLECTION METRO Beige KING Pillowsham NEW 80 $19.95 Time Remaining: 24d 14h 20m Buy It Now for only: $19.95 |
![]() Hotel Collection King Bedskirt Metro NWT $33.15 Time Remaining: 11h 31m Buy It Now for only: $33.15 |
![]() Hotel Collection King Pillow Sham Metro $16.99 Time Remaining: 14d 11h 30m Buy It Now for only: $16.99 |
![]() METRO MAURYA COLLECTION Solid 500TC 100 Egtncotnsgl3PcDuvetcoverC Set Queen $74.99 Time Remaining: 3d 11h 12m Buy It Now for only: $74.99 |
![]() HOTEL COLLECTION METRO BOLD STRIPE 18X18 PILLOW $19.99 Time Remaining: 14d 21h 24m Buy It Now for only: $19.99 |
![]() Hotel Collection Metro Queen Coverlet NIP 270 $149.99 Time Remaining: 18d 24m Buy It Now for only: $149.99 |
Metro Collection

Art Positive "Minds the Gap" of Consumerist Culture in Modern Metros
Art Positive presents Mind the Gap, a group show by four young artists, Krittika Narula, Pampa Panwar, Sanjay Sundram and Sanjeev Sonpimpare. The artists play around with ideas in mixed media and varied forms and styles asking us to mind the gap created by consumerist culture in today's metros. The exhibition will be on from November 2, 2010 to November 30, 2010 at Art Positive, F-213/B, Old MB Road, Lado Sarai, New Delhi- 110030.
According to curator Sushma Bahl, "Mind the Gap is an exhibition that meanders around the city, its changing ethos of all pervasive consumerist culture of instant gratification, popular icons, new media and traffic. They challenge the distorted notion of development and progress with its disastrous environmental impact urging one to mind the gap."
Says Anu Bajaj, Director, Art Positive: "The works will be featured in four different sections of the exhibition within the gallery space, each with its distinct aesthetic, perspective and medium. The works will persuade one to rethink and mind the gap between perception and reality, between what is and what ought to be, while the reality of life, its joys and travails in a contemporary context."
Brief Intro of the Artists:
Krittika Narula: A Delhi based artist, Krittika Narula learnt painting at the Delhi College of Art. She works in installation, performance and mixed media using found materials of cultural significance. She is currently doing her Mater's in Art History owing her interest in art practice and theory. Her work focuses on the city and life's never ending search. The installation project exhibited in the show with a Tata Nano car, an icon of public imagination, covered to the brim with soft stuffed elephant toys, a trail of pollution masks and some typographical messages on its body (Proclaiming: Please Take Me Home), featured strapped shut as if to prevent a deluge, is a remark on the gap between consumerist craze and aspirations of the city bred as against the denial to many others. Her video is about the rapidly changing dynamics of our culture and India today, on a fast track to ‘progress' unmindful of what it tramples over on the way. The congestion and packaging signifies movement and multi layering of the composition and the gaze, raises questions about the distinction between a product and work of art as the repetitive pattern turns hypnotic in a meditative mould in to get the message across. Using familiar and unfamiliar props from our collective memory that co-exist along with traditional techniques, she juxtaposes them against our new obsessions to signal the alert ‘mind the gap'. Inspired by Gandhi's philosophy, Krittika also works with thread while Frida Kahlo has also been her muse.
Sanjeev Sonpimpare: A graduate in Painting from Sir J.J. School of Art, Mumbai, Sanjeev Sonpimpare received UNESCO-ASCHBERG residency at the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin. A Mumbai based artist, Sanjeev is also interested in art theory besides practice. His work in a semi realistic oeuvre has traversed from an abstract mode to representational art that emphasizes on the struggles that govern our life in urban metros. There is much preparation and planning including scene setting, photography, drawing and digital intervention that precedes his work on the canvas with paint and brush to give his work its special theatrical appeal. The work in the show confronts the urban unmindful unplanned construct and greed that undermines normal life challenging the notion of co-existence and convergence. He focuses on unplanned building and re-building that goes on in the name of infrastructure development that makes farmers landless and common people homeless.
Pampa Panwar: After completing her Bachelor's degree in Painting from Vishwa-Bharati University, Santiniketan, and Master's in Printmaking from Fine Arts Dept at M.S. University, Baroda, Pampa Panwar got a second Master's degree from Slade School of Art in London and residency at Centre d'Art, Marnay-sur-Seine, France amongst others. Her work in mixed media meanders around nature and time in a fine incorporation of landscape, narrative and abstract. Her colorful paintings about the changing cycles of weather, seasons and time, display the use of collage and text. She plays around with her frame to encase the imagery and question the gap between human perceptions of reality at one level, between her own vision, and that of the viewer and his/her way of looking at what she creates.
Sanjay Sundram: A professionally trained architect who went on to specialize in visual communication with a Master's from IIT Mumbai, Sanjay Sundram is currently the head of R&D (New Media) in a multinational company. Sanjay experiments with creative designing while also practicing and refining his art that has been show in New York besides India. The impact of his diverse interests is reflected in his thought provoking installations and paintings that underline the widening gap all around in the cities. The various sized toy cars re-formed and re-created unsteadily hanging and blocking the skyline evoke fear of traffic with intrigue and dismay. His paintings recall the gift of nature which human greed seems all set to engulf due to short sightedness.
About the Author
Rooplin Sharma,
PR Executive,
PERSONA
Am I Metrosexual?
I know this question has been asked on here a lot. I am curious about it as well. Unlike most of the posts on here about guys liking their hair. Thinking they are metro for wanting their hair to be perfect, I go for the entire image.
Clothes, I spend upwards of $200 for a pair of jeans at Buffalo. I go to Le Chateau and buy bright dress shirts for $100 easy. I like wearing tight shirts.
I workout 5 times a week so I'm not small, I have a toned figure.
During the winter I go tanning once a month to keep a good skin tone.
I shower everyday, Keep my hair short and wax my hair messy and am always cleanly shaven.
I have a collection of cologne, love smelling good.
I am not gay, I love woman.
Would you say I'm metro? and do girls find these type of guys attractive?
yeah u are.its not a bad thing it just means u care about my apperance.im sure girls are into it.
DC Metro Collection (Part 5)
Tags: design, history, images, metro collection by bonavita, metro collection crib, metro collection lighting, metro collection rug, metro collections, photography, photos








