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Coming soon! Learn how to craft paper garlands in the comfort of your own home, follow along as Monica Rani Rudhar shows each step of her process, turning simple materials into a gift for a friend or an adornment in your home.

In India, garlands are more than decoration, they symbolise welcome, respect, devotion and celebration. These garlands are used to adorn people, homes and sacred spaces during special occasions, carrying deep cultural significance.

If you’d like to share your creation with us, send it over to us via Blacktown Arts social media!

Before the release of the workshop, watch Monica’s interview to gain a deeper insight into her practice.

Artist Interview with Monica Rani Rudhar

Bio

Monica Rani Rudhar is an artist based on Gadigal land, working across sculpture, video, and performance. Her practice explores the themes of longing and loss related to cultural identity, tracing intergenerational stories within her family to create space for imaginative possibilities. Born to Indian and Romanian migrant parents, her work is influenced by the forces of cultural conformity, essentialization, and commodification within a settler colonial context. Monica’s practice seeks to restore familial histories, traditions, and rituals that have been dispersed by the migration and displacement of her ancestors. Through her auto-ethnographic approach, she translates her family’s fragmented oral histories to reclaim narratives of relationships, resistance, and ritual. These stories intertwine, weaving a personal mythology that manifests their cultural fictions and futures in so-called Australia.

Monica graduated from University of New South Wales Art in 2021, and has exhibited work across Australia and internationally including the Aotearoa Art Fair, New Zealand; Bunjil Place, Victoria; Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, NSW; Carriageworks, NSW; Chau Chak Wing Museum, NSW; and Gallery27, India. Artworks are held in Private and Public Collections including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Artbank and Blacktown City Arts with works commissioned by Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre and The Powerhouse Museum (MAAS). In 2023 Monica was awarded the Gosford Emerging Art Prize, in 2024 she was curated into Primavera: Young Australian Artists at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and in 2025 she was awarded the acquisitive Blacktown City Art Prize. Monica is represented by Martin Browne Contemporary

This project is presented by Blacktown Arts and supported by Blacktown City Council.

Image Credits:

Monica Rani Rudhar in studio, 2025, photography by Garry Trinh