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Create a media accountPress Kit | no. 7002-01
Press release only in English
Multitude Of Sins presents BigTop, a farm-to-table eatery born from the brewing cauldron of nostalgia and travel, and christened as The Circus Canteen. The circus is seen as an event of fanfare, wherein troop members put together a spectacle far removed from the clutches of the mundane.
BigTop has been conceived with unconventionality helming the process. Each element, from surface finishes, custom lighting, and art installations, to furniture, has been curated from a city-wide waste donation drive; treasures wrought from salvage markets and dumping yards with less than 10% of the material being freshly sourced.
Graced by the artistic community of Bangalore Creative Circus, this venue is emblematic of unshackled creative expression that manifests as hues, textures, and bespoke upcycled installations. Each table encapsulates a transportive experience, ensuring that the waste dons a reimagined sculptural presence entwined with utility.
The series of arches at the entrance is composed of scrap metal bathed in a lively teal hue. The passageway axis is dotted with grunge chandeliers consisting of bike chains and metal filings, flanked by upcycled vehicle headlights that pose as luminaires. The overarching flooring is an ensemble of discarded display samples pieced together in a Tetris-inspired fashion. A patchwork collage of discarded wallpaper swatches creates a riveting backdrop to the food counter, imbuing it with an interplay of colour and pattern. The focal collage wall is a mishmash of e-waste, sanitary fixtures, and discarded furniture that resembles a whimsically imagined jigsaw of waste.
Project BigTop is the beacon of a pressing environmental message, yet it garbs itself in an artistic mien, while revealing its identity to its end-users. It is a space for misfits, where oddities belong serendipitously!
Furniture ArtTechnical sheet
Official Project Name: Big Top
Size: 2,134 Square Feet
Location: Bangalore Creative Circus, Yeshwantpur, Bangalore, India
Client: Bangalore Creative Circus
Design Firm: Multitude Of Sins
Principal Designer: Smita Thomas
Collaborators:
Metal Art: Mechanimal, Rahul KP
Light and Tape art: Layer Tape, Nithin Sadhu
Graphic Artist: Rahul Chacko
Wall Art and Graffiti Artist: Shunnal Ligade
Furniture Art: Kamesh Bhagatji
Project Completion: January 2022
Photographer: Ishita Sitwala
About Multitude Of Sins
Multitude Of Sins is a rather curious design studio based out of Bangalore, India, with a restless aesthetic and a taste for all things surreal. As a studio, they tell unexpected stories through their work, using powerful combinations of personalities, materials, colors, and compositions.
Multitude Of Sins initially started out doing interiors but, over the course of the past 4 years, they have designed furniture, lights, rugs, art, art installations, graphics, and more. In the years ahead, the studio aspires to move between mediums and disciplines and, hopefully, to eventually champion versatility.
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Smita Thomas, Designer-in-Chief
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The entrance door engages the sensory experiences of touch and sound as it leaps into a rabbit hole of memory. The existing site door was retrofitted to give it a renewed lease of colour and elemental play. A radial octet of hand horns occupies the centre while bicycle bells stipple the scarlet door.
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Welcome to the circus!
The acts of whimsical fanfare begin to unfold right at the entrance. The art installation adjacent to the entrance passageway comprises an electric pole found in a scrapyard which was accessorised with defunct appliances and gadgets like a plasma television, CD players, and retro computer speakers in zesty colours!
The installation was further made to feel like a slice of life representation with the inclusion of repurposed wire from which dangle tattered clothes, shoes, and kites — an extremely quintessentially Indian visual that makes a debut in every mohalla (street).
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A series of arches dot the passage when one makes their way inside. Bathed in a lively warm teal hue, these arches made of scrap metal pose as architectural features to create a sense of movement as one traverses the space. Grunge chandeliers made of bike chains and metal filings levitate over the passageway, flanked by upcycled vehicle headlights that present themselves as bespoke luminaires
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The billing counter stretches itself along the expanse of the passageway and culminates as a live salad counter on the far end.
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The carcass of the live salad counter was rendered in a stark black hue because of the snippets of discarded tyre patches. Worn out tyres were salvaged, sliced into smaller portions, and consequently nailed into place, an experimental project inching upon insanity as it stretched over the course of a month. This process resulted in an ebony canvas that was layered with leather trimmings, fringes, discarded rubber tyres, manhole covers, safety pins, pipe sections, and metal tacks creating a monochrome mosaic.
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Ishita Sitwala
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The entrance to the café is earmarked by a buffer zone that rests behind the veil of an artisanal barn door which seems to have been teleported through time from the confines of an underground speakeasy! Illustrated by Artist Shunnal Ligade, the Snitz’s merry mouth that splits wide open unable to contain his roaring laughter has been backed by a lining of perforated metal sheet. This ante space hosts a fleet of custom food carts that emulate the produce-to-plate concept in a new light with these ingenious contraptions. Finished in hues of pastel blue, yellow, and mint, these food carts are a humble homage to the ‘haathgaadis’ possessed by Indian vegetable and fruit hawkers. Curvilinear in their make, the carts exude an industrial nuance in the form of their filament bulbs fixtures, wooden crates, and tubular structure.
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The floral neon- tubed chandelier in the lounge area blooms in complete glory as the evening inches on and the surrounding box lights by Nithin Sadhu have been layered with custom filaments that give them a cosmic iridescence!
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A section of the focal collage wall moving into the corporate section is staunchly embedded with a collection of e-waste and discarded furniture, that have been pieced together to reimagine it as a haptic jigsaw. The core intention was to ensure that the waste in its originally dishevelled form now assumes the aura of a curated artistic sculpture, wherein each object has been carefully made a constituent element in the larger picture, with some elements that can be functionally utilised .The furniture here was refurbished with new fabric which sports dapper Gingham checks and pinstripes. The high-back chairs specifically seem to have gotten Barney Stinson’s memo and are ‘suited up’ to impress!
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The base of the table has been created using discarded plywood and the chairs have been reupholstered in custom Alice In Wonderland-inspired prints that boast of rabbits, antelopes and owls decked up to grace a stately reception in town with scrap mild steel armrests shaped into form.
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The focal wall behind the Christmas table is a collection of e-waste, sanitary fixtures, discarded furniture, and bits and bobs that have been pieced together to reimagine it as a haptic jigsaw. The core intention was to ensure that the waste in its originally dishevelled form now assumes the aura of a curated artistic sculpture, wherein each object has been carefully made a constituent element in the larger picture, with some elements that can be functionally utilised.
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A glimpse to the belle of the ball in the Christmas section , the Water Closet seat. The base was made utilising a discarded metal drain cover upon which a WC fitting found on site was lodged.
Various paraphernalia from the donation drive has been tactfully assembled to embellish the same. It’s the best seat in the house in our opinion and truly from where we believe the best ideas are conceived too!
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One of the tables on the the upper deck washed in a lively coral hue have been detailed with defunct sanitary pipe sections and electronic regulators, An ‘elbow’ light fixture conjured to life by the studio illuminates these tables. The industrial lighting fixture hoisted over the nooks is a composition of sanitary pipes and hexagonal mesh that wraps itself delicately around an exposed warm light tube on the interior.
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The pièce de résistance is the partition system that stands at the periphery of the dining area and the community desk space overlooking the interiors of BCC. An obscure portal in its inspiration, the installation is a composite of mild steel sections found on the site interspersed with plywood display shelves that stack up upon slender metal support members. This installation is further interjected with doses of salmon pink, motor gears, discarded teapots, and film reel boxes amidst other arbitrary curios.
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