
Five Indian Contemporary Artists You Should Add To Your Collection ASAP
Luxeva, Nov 8, 2019, Khusboo Sharma. Read more

Get ready to witness works by top 50 artists at the Delhi Contemporary Art Week
..Radhika Agarwala’s Every Bit of Earth Is a Bit of You II, is an enigmatic abstract sculpture made of cast bronze and patina, perlite and concrete...Read more

7 Works by Women You Must See at the Delhi Contemporary Art Week 2019
..Agarwala’s driftwood piece sculpted in bronze is striking for its decaying beauty... Noor Anand Chawla, Sep 2019 Read more

Allegorical and Figurative, Rosalyn D’Mello | 30 Aug, 2019
Subversive narratives and ecological imprints at the Delhi Contemporary Art Week Read more

What is contemporary?
25 August 2019 | Navneet Mendiratta Read more

15 Artworks We Loved at the 2019 India Art Fair
Artisera's top 15 picks from IAF 2019. Read more

Vogue Magazine, August 23, 2018
Bringing the best of the capital’s modern art under one roof Read more

G/Rove Coverage, Verve Magazine, 2017
EXPLORE QUESTIONS OF GEOLOGY AT G/ROVE, by Verve Magazine Read more

G/Rove @ Latitude 28, Collateral event India Art Fair, 2017
Part of India Art Fair's - Lado Sarai Nights.

Verve India: October 2016
Special mention in the India Story coverage, by Verve Magazine Read more

I never want the journey to end: Radhika Agarwala
Trans World Features (TWF) | 04 Sep 2014 Read more

Mapping Detours - Radhika Agarwala's Journey over the years
..It is a celebration of encounters - some elaborate, others fleeting.. Read more

Interview with 1883 Magazine, London , 2013
This week we made the trip to Kristin Hjellegjerde/ARTECO Gallery for a private view of new works from one on India’s most exciting new artists, Radhika Agarwala. Read more

Art Review: Encounter @ ArtEco Gallery
BY TABISH KHAN Read more

Encounter - ArtEco Gallery
7th Sep - 6th Oct, 2012,
Private View - 6:30-9:00PM.
ArtEco gallery is delighted to present "Encounter" with Alison Stolwood and Radhika Agarwala.

For Two Lovers, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London
Kristin Hjellegjerde/ARTECO Gallery is proud to present a solo show of new works by young artist Radhika Agarwala, marking her second exhibition and her first solo exhibition with the gallery. Running from 15 November – 20 December, “The Two Lovers” evokes fantastic vistas that cross the divide between landscape and dreamscape.

4th Interim Exhibition: Who do you think we are?
Artists: Radhika Agarwala, Luna Jung-eun Lee and Soheila Sokhanvari Read more

A certain seduction
Visual Arts ,By Rita Datta 25-04-2015 Read more

The Tube Without Paint, A Fungal Lattice And The Bird That Never Flew Away
Private View : 29 September 2015, Jehangir Art Gallery, Kala Ghoda, Mumbai

American stage for city theatre
By The Telegraph Online, Published 8.06.14 Read more

Review in Millenium Post, 7 June 2014
10 artists in search of their roots... Read more

Review in Economic Times, 6 June 2014
Mapping Detours - Radhika Agarwala's journey over the years Read more

Review in FAD Magazine , London September 6 , 2012
The works invest in the spiritual dimensions at the core of vastly different ethics and visual languages between Asian and Western cultures, and make playful gesture towards a complex history and developing interconnection between the two. In her work hybridisation is actual and represented, actual through the conjunction of divergent cultural vantages that exhume the sacred with the secular, the profound with the mundane, and the figurative with the geometric.

The Middle Of The Garden
Tejas Gallery , Kolkata
Private View : 7 August 2014. 3 artists from Serbia and India re-imagine , recollect and re-appropriate in a tropical forest panorama in Kolkata.Each artist representing their personal ideologies and techniques, the show reveals the absurdity of limitless myths, fantasies and a cultural vocabulary that becomes the point of departure for Radhika Agarwala, Ivana Ivkovic and Viraag Desai.

Review in Elephant Magazine, London November 6 , 2013
For too long now, the contemporary art world has been trying to gain a better understanding of trends in South Asian art and the complex histories that surround them. Yet most approaches to non-Western art continue to be very much situated within the framework of otherness and exoticism. Radhika Agarwala’s paintings and sculptures stand in contrast to these fixities of knowledge, and are unique for taking direction from both her cultural experiences in her native country of India as well as Western cities.