Collaborative Art Projects and Digital Campaigns for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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Collaborative Art Projects and Digital Campaigns for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Ragini Kumari Singh
Assistant Professor, School of Fine Arts
AAFT University of Media and Arts,
Raipur, Chhattisgarh, India-492001
ABSTRACT
The Aravani Art Project is a trans-women and cis-women-led art collective dedicated to transforming public spaces into platforms for visibility, inclusion, and dialogue for the transgender and LGBTQIA+ communities. This paper explores how community-based public art initiatives can serve as powerful tools for social change, empowerment, and healing among marginalized gender identities. By facilitating collaborative mural projects, workshops, and street art interventions, the collective challenges dominant narratives around gender and advocates for reclaiming public spaces as safe, expressive, and inclusive environments. The study critically examines the intersectional approach adopted by the Aravani Art Project, which integrates cis-women from marginalized backgrounds to widen the scope of social justice through creative engagement. Additionally, the project creates alternative livelihood opportunities for trans individuals by professionalizing their artistic contributions. Through an ethnographic lens, this paper reflects on the impact of visual storytelling, shared authorship, and community dialogue in reshaping perceptions and fostering dignity, agency, and cultural memory. The findings reinforce the potential of art as both a social practice and a medium for grassroots advocacy in advancing gender equity and collective well-being.
Keywords: Transgender visibility, community art, gender inclusivity, public space, intersectional feminism, social practice art, LGBTQIA+ empowerment
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