Events in Goa

Serendipity Arts Festival 2025 Concludes 10th Edition with a Grand, Multidisciplinary Finale


Written by Tanisha Cardozo || Team Allycaral

The Serendipity Arts Festival 2025 drew to a memorable close in Panaji, marking the conclusion of its landmark 10th edition with a sweeping celebration of artistic expression across disciplines. Over ten days, the festival transformed Goa’s public spaces, heritage buildings, and cultural venues into hubs of creativity, dialogue, and community engagement, reaffirming its place as one of India’s most significant multidisciplinary arts festivals.

As the festival concluded, the Hon’ble Governor of Goa, Shri Pusapati Ashok Gajapathi Raju, accompanied by Mr. Sunil Kant Munjal, Founder Patron of Serendipity Arts, visited several festival venues across the city. Their walkthrough included Azad Maidan, the Old PWD Building, the Directorate of Accounts, the Old GMC Complex, and Art Park, where they interacted with artists, curators, and members of the festival team. The visit highlighted the festival’s expansive programming and its meaningful engagement with public and heritage spaces, underscoring its role in enriching Goa’s cultural landscape.

The closing day featured a series of standout performances across music and theatre. The Arena at Nagalli Hills hosted a vibrant finale curated by Sneha Khanwalkar, bringing together artists including Mulla Altaf Raja Ebrahim, Jasbir Jassi, Sunetra Banerjee, Maithili Shome, Zoheb Husain Khan, and Gaurav Pawankumar Khullar. The concert blended beloved tracks with bold sonic experimentation, delivering a colourful, playful, and energetic conclusion that left audiences exhilarated.

Theatre programming concluded at the Old GMC Complex with Bob Marley from Kodihalli, curated by Sankar Venkateswaran. The Kannada production drew inspiration from the legacy of reggae icon Bob Marley to examine questions of identity, freedom, and caste through a compelling mix of Brechtian theatre and musical interludes, inviting audiences to reflect on marginalised voices and social realities.

Music continued to resonate across venues with the Nagaland Madrigal Singers performing at Dinanath Mangeshkar Kala Mandir. The 19-member choir presented a repertoire spanning classical sacred works, Naga and Asian folk music, international folk songs, and contemporary compositions, showcasing their artistic versatility and cultural heritage. The same venue hosted Spirit and Harmony: A Christmas Special, curated by Ranjit Barot, which ushered in the festive season with a grand big-band production celebrating iconic holiday music in a visually rich setting.

The River Raag series concluded with Manganiyar Parampara at Santa Monica Jetty, where Manganiyar musicians from Rajasthan performed against the backdrop of the Mandovi River. The sunset cruise performance wove together folk traditions, nature, and spirituality, offering a poetic and reflective conclusion as music flowed alongside the river.

Throughout the final day, visitors continued to engage with exhibitions and installations that remained open across venues. These included Multiplay 02: Soft Systems, The Culinary Odyssey of Goa, What Does Loss Taste Like?, Home is Where the Heart is, Infinite Drape, Stepwells: Poetry in Craft, and Hands, Tools, and the Living Thread, among many others. A photography exhibition exploring the evolving idea of home brought together five photographers whose works reflected personal and intergenerational perspectives on belonging.

The festival’s commitment to inclusivity remained central until the very end. The Children’s Programme at Art Park concluded with storytelling sessions, workshops, and interactive experiences, while accessibility initiatives at The Access Village continued through exhibitions, sensory spaces, and workshops designed to ensure an inclusive festival experience for all.

As Serendipity Arts Festival 2025 came to a close, it left behind ten days of artistic exploration that celebrated diversity, innovation, and dialogue. Spanning theatre, music, visual arts, craft, photography, culinary arts, and accessibility programming, the festival once again demonstrated the transformative power of the arts to bring people together and reimagine shared cultural spaces.

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Breaking Barriers: Serendipity Arts Festival 2024


A unique experiential programme at the ongoing Serendipity Arts Festival (SAF) 2024 has given a different twist to the concept of ‘blind dating’. 

Among the highlights of the festival’s 9th edition is the innovative ‘Blind Date with Friends,’ an experiential programme designed to foster deeper connections and mutual understanding. Participants are paired with visually impaired individuals for a journey through the festival’s exhibits, sharing conversations, meals and art experiences. “The process itself is the art,” explains Salil Chaturvedi, the programme’s curator, emphasising how such encounters break barriers and celebrate the richness of diverse perspectives.

Goa-based Salil Chaturvedi, an acclaimed writer, poet and disability campaigner, has virtually redefined the intersection of art and accessibility at the Serendipity Arts Festival 2024. Known for his poignant works in poetry and fiction, as well as groundbreaking advocacy, Salil has steered SAF 2024’s accessibility-focused initiatives, creating inclusive spaces where creativity and community meet.

This year’s accessibility interventions aimed to set a benchmark for inclusive art spaces, which included tactile exhibits and ramps to outdoor rest areas and wheelchair-friendly installations. A professional access audit guided these changes, ensuring thoughtful infrastructure upgrades across heritage venues. Additionally, initiatives like a deaf poetry jam and tactile art workshops brought artists with disabilities to the forefront, challenging traditional notions of visibility in art.

Salil’s collaboration with differently-abled artists has been transformative. “For the first time, we prioritised their presence not just as participants but as curators and creators,” he shared. Projects like ‘Nature’s Symphony: A Bird Watching Adventure’, where visually impaired individuals explore nature, and others where they create art from beach waste and the tactile design programme, ‘Touched’, crafted with input from blind schools, highlighted how sensory and emotional experiences can redefine art.

Through these efforts, Salil envisions a future where inclusivity is the norm, rather than the exception. “The mindset shift is key,” he stressed, advocating for leadership roles for people with disabilities in cultural institutions. By blending empathy, technology and innovative programming, his vision offered a roadmap for inclusive art, fostering a space where everyone can contribute and experience its transformative power.

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Serendipity Arts Festival: The Ninth Edition to showcase 1,800+ Artists, 200+ Projects


~ The 9th edition of the Serendipity Arts Festival will be held at Panaji in Goa from December 15 to December 22.

~ 1,800-plus artists from across the globe will be participating in the festival this year.

~ Over 22 venues are accommodating the Festival’s extensive programming across Panaji.

Panaji, December 2024: Goa is set to roll out the red carpet for the ninth edition of Serendipity Arts Festival (SAF) 2024 which returns to Goa with its biggest edition yet. Featuring over 1,800 Goan, national, and international artists and 200-plus projects, panels, workshops, and public art interventions across 22 venues, it promises a vibrant celebration of creativity and culture.

South Asia’s largest multidisciplinary arts festival will convert its long-time home, the vibrant capital city of Panaji, into a hub for artistic endeavours and creative pursuits from December 15 to December 22.

“We are proud to host the ninth edition of SAF 2024, set to take place in the historic city of Panaji, its primary venue since inception. A popular part of Goan culture and a fixture in the state’s December event calendar, SAF 2024 returns on a much grander scale, aiming to strengthen community engagement through relevant conversations, further enhance accessibility in the arts and make the Festival an exciting, immersive experience for all,” said Sunil Kant Munjal, Founder Patron, Serendipity Arts.

The Festival is supported by the Government of Goa, in partnership with the Entertainment Society of Goa and the Corporation of the City of Panaji, along with the Directorate of Art and Culture, Goa, Goa Tourism Department, Kala Academy Goa, Goa Forest Department and Imagine Panaji Smart City Development.

SAF 2024 will be conducted across 22-plus venues spread across the culturally rich city of Panaji — the Art Park, the Excise Building, the Old GMC Complex, ESG Building, Santa Monica Jetty, Samba Square, Mala Pump House, the Arena at Nagalli Hills Ground, Kala Academy, Azad Maidan, Directorate of Accounts, Caranzalem Beach, Dona Paula Parking Lot and more.

Since its first edition in 2016, SAF has ensured that it has made the arts universally inclusive and accessible across creative disciplines, factoring in holistic sustainability and cultural place-making. 

“As we unveil the 9th edition of the Serendipity Arts Festival, we reaffirm our belief in culture as a transformative soft power that can invigorate economies and bring meaningful change to society. Over the years, symbiotic relationships, collaborations, and partnerships have been at the heart of our journey, creating a multiplier effect for communities,” said Smriti Rajgarhia, Director of Serendipity Arts and the Serendipity Arts Festival.

This year, 13 expert curators are breathing life into the Festival’s disciplines. Bickram Ghosh and Zubin Balaporia are curators for Music; Veeranganakumari Solanki and Thukral & Tagra come together to curate Visual Arts; Theatre is curated by Quasar Thakore Padamsee and Sankar VenkateshwaranGeeta Chandran and Jayachandran Palazhy are curating Dance; Culinary Arts is being curated by Elizabeth Yorke and Anusha Murthy of Edible Issues; Kristine Michael and Sandeep Sangaru are curating Craft; Salil Chaturvedi is heading the Accessibility quotient.

This year, visitors can explore sustainable food alternatives, delve into climate-conscious craft practices, and engage with multisensory exhibits as part of the Visual Arts curation. They can also groove to global music beats, experience a somatic symphony through Dance programming, and reflect on human experiences in Theatre, all while participating in accessibility and sustainability endeavours in the art space. AI interventions, curated by Mathieu Wothke (Somewhere Arts) and Joel Ferree (LACMA), will be prevalent across the visual, culinary, and performance disciplines, adding a layer of innovation and exploration to the festival. 

Additionally, special curators like Preethi Athreya for Performance Art, Comedy Wagon for Stand-up Comedy, Gaya Tideman for Music in the Art Park, Zainab Wani (Zequenx) for the B-Side Project, and Damian Christinger for Ghosts in Machines bring fresh perspectives to this edition. Key exhibitions such as Eternal Echoes: The Resonance of Heart with Heritage, curated by Helen Acharya at Azad Maidan, and Carbon, led by Jahnavi Phalkey in collaboration with Ravi Agarwal, promise compelling and thought-provoking experiences.

Prioritising Goan and Goa-based artists in the festival’s programming, SAF has granted them a platform where their talent can put themselves on the global art map and garner international acclaim. The Goa Familia – Archive of Potential (Goan) Futures project, curated by Lina Vincent and Akshay Mahajan, also returns, offering a heartfelt exploration of Goan heritage through oral histories, photography, and archival materials. This year, eminent names in Goa’s cultural space like Assavri Kulkarni, Shankar Turi, Divesh Gadekar, Manashri Pai Dukle, Aldona Video Club, Bookworm Goa, Prashanti Talpankar and others are bringing their expertise to the Festival.

According to Pallavi Dempo, SAF Patron, the Serendipity Arts Festival plays a pivotal role in nurturing creativity and talent. “The Serendipity Arts Festival is the most sought-after cultural event in Goa, and we are truly fortunate to host it here. My heartfelt gratitude and congratulations to Sunil Kant Munjal, Founder Patron of Serendipity Arts, for gifting Goa this incredible festival,” she said.

The Festival is free to all visitors upon registration. However, owing to popular demand and limited seating, some projects have a nominal fee per head. SAF 2024 also continues with dedicated programming for children, ensuring the next generation of artists is set up in good stead.

Quick Takes from Curators and Artists: 

“We are extremely excited for the Visual Arts section. This year, as part of our project ‘Multiplay’, expect everything from getting your hair braided to a ‘book massage’ as a multisensory experience. ‘Poems on the Move’, curated by us and Salil Chaturvedi, will have poets grace the ears of SAF shuttle passengers, among many other public interventions,” 

  • Thukral and Tagra, Visual Arts curator

“At ‘A Haptic Score’, visitors can come and explore how sound and sight, as synaesthesia invoke feelings that are deeply personal, and most of the works bring you back to yourself in some way,” 

  • Veerangana Solanki, Visual Arts curator

“Since ceramics are a huge part of Goa’s history, from the terracotta roosters and lions, to the Azulejos. The idea was to combine the Goans and Goa-settled artisans, craftspeople with other parts of the country, especially West Bengal, as they share a colonial background. People can look forward to seeing these intertwined histories visually represented at the festival.”

  • Kristine Michael, Craft Curator

“Life in areas like Ladakh has several lessons to teach us, represented in the project ‘Abundance in Scarcity: Exploring Ladakh’s Sustainable Ingenuity’. People can come see how limited resources drive creativity and sustainability, cultural resilience and the significance of environmental stewardship.”

  • Sandeep Sangaru, Craft curator

For details on the curator and projects please visit https://www.serendipityartsfestival.com/