Known for making work in a variety of media, Gupta often draws upon the familiar objects of the everyday to focus on the rapidly changing state of Indian Society.
"Art is about life,” he says, “so I make my work about myself and what I know. Art is valuable because it is about experiences that have nothing in common with art".
Standing several metres high, the steel sculpture is robust yet the careful positioning of utensils suggest a hint of delicacy and precariousness.
Visitors are invited to walk around the piece, touch the objects fixed within it, look through the gaps and question how the artist has created it. Its shining steel surface captures the sunlight and also glistens in the rain providing a striking visual attraction for passers- by.
Appearing as though just landed from a long journey the sculpture points its nose towards the nearby activity of the Curry Mile and echoes the long distance historically travelled by Manchester’s South Asian community. Steel rods protrude through the structure conveying a sense of speed and power, referencing the fast pace of the popular area and its successful commercialisation of South Asian cuisine.