Our professors gave us a sketching assignment at Borivali Station, a busy place full of energy. The goal was to capture the overall feeling of the space rather than focusing on small details. The environment was constantly changing with people moving around, trains coming and going, and the station’s design affecting how people interacted. This made it a great opportunity to explore how space is shaped by the people and objects in it.
The project also made us become more observant, since the scene was always changing. People rushing for trains, the changing light throughout the day, and the movement around us kept things dynamic. We concentrated on the big elements, like the flow of people, the tracks, the light, and the layout of the station.
My drawing further developed into showing a panoramic view of the railway station, people rushing, trains coming and going, noise, movement, life. That’s what I wanted to show: how we don’t see the world from one fixed view. Our attention keeps shifting. One moment we’re focused on someone walking by, the next we’re watching a train pull in. Even though the drawing looks still, it reflects how our minds move quickly, always changing focus.
The panoramic view isn’t just about seeing everything at once — it’s about how quickly our perspective changes, second by second.
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THE PROJECTOR
This panoramic drawing I made sparked a new idea. The way it captured multiple moments in one frame reminded me of a camera roll, where different images come together as a single strip. That visual connection inspired me to take it further. I began thinking about how I could bring that concept to life, not just as a still image, but as something dynamic. That’s when I decided to create a projector, a way to present different perspectives and moments together, just like the drawing, but in motion.