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Global Indianstory Global Indian ExclusiveDigital entrepreneur Ashwath Narayanan connects influencers with purpose-driven organisations
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Indian Entrepreneur

Digital entrepreneur Ashwath Narayanan connects influencers with purpose-driven organisations

Written by: Team GI Youth

(April 4, 2023) Like millions of others, when he first moved to the United States of America to pursue a bachelor’s degree in political science and government from George Washington University, his main aim was to finish the course and find a good job. But fate had other plans for Ashwath Narayanan, who at 21, founded his own company – Social Currant a unique platform that matches impact brands, nonprofits, and purpose-driven organisations with the right creators and influencers. “If you are looking to reach young people and engage them – you will have to go places you can find them. And social media is where this audience is, and they follow influencers. So, I started a marketing agency focused on getting the young people involved in social causes being promoted by these organisation, using various social media platforms,” the young entrepreneur said.

Entrepreneur | Ashwath Narayanan | Global Indian

The Social Current, which started with a small team based in DC, is now a global agency and is focused on empowering creators, young people, and individuals focused on impact. “I originally founded Social Currant as a marketing agency focused on giving young people representation and voices in rooms where people were making decisions about how to reach us, without us,” the entrepreneur shared, adding, “I thought we would start an agency, help social impact organisations figure out emerging media platforms like TikTok and Reels and pay our rent as a result.”

An entrepreneurial journey

Born in the US, Ashwanth moved back to India when he was just a toddler, only to return to the US for his education. The entrepreneur recalled, “I had a very interesting childhood. Even when I was back in India, I had a US passport and I would renew my visa every nine months. This always made me feel that I was from two countries – different from each other in every way possible. My mother worked in a non-profit organisation and would take me to several events, which I didn’t like attending at all. However, I think that left a huge impact on me and motivated me to do what I do today. I moved back to the US when I was 18 years old, for my under graduation in 2018.”

It was here that the young entrepreneur took more interest in marketing and started getting involved in various startup projects. “When I was in high school, I would often write stories. I wanted to pursue a career in journalism, but once I got to the US, I realised that marketing is also a form of telling a story to the audience. I got deeply embedded into the startup and nonprofit space just being in Washington, DC. I went through a startup incubator, worked at a social impact game company called Game Genius, and was generally very involved with people building their businesses. That was the first experience I had with the startup space as well as the social entrepreneurship space and I haven’t looked back since.” he shares.

Entrepreneur | Ashwath Narayanan | Global Indian

Team Social Currant

As a consultant helping budding organisations, Ashwath realised the potential social media – and especially the young influencers on various platforms like Instagram and TikTok – had while connecting a company to its audience. “I was working with various organisations as their consultant, helping organisations how to reach young people. It was going well, and I knew what I was doing. So I decided that I would launch my agency. I hired people my age, and I can say that Social Currant is a youth-run organisation. In fact, when I started the company I was still in college, and so were several other people I had hired,” shared the Global Indian.

Long way to go

With a CV full of internships and short-term jobs, many young people might not have been confident to start a company. Not Ashwath, though. While he was a little nervous at the beginning, he was also sure about his marketing abilities and also had faith in the cause. “Since we started, we’ve pivoted into an influencer marketing agency and now a tech platform helping social impact brands, nonprofits, and CSR initiatives match with and manage mission-aligned creators. Having facilitated several strong collaborations between organisations and creators, we are focused on helping creators get paid and monetise around mission-aligned causes,” the entrepreneur said.

Giving an insight about one of his projects, he said, “One of our favourite projects was for Community Change, one of our first clients in the space. We matched them with Tega, a content creator on TikTok. Over the months, Tega not only did many videos for Community Change but also came to one of their events in Michigan to create this TikTok with Congressman Jamaal Bowman. It was a great experience bringing a partnership to life in real life but also seeing its awesome reception on the platform.”

While the non-profit space is still inaccessible to young people and struggles to keep up with modern trends and innovations, Ashwath feels that Social Currant can change this narrative. “We’ve seen nonprofits of all sizes need different things and have different levels of technological advancement, similar to any business. We’ve been blessed to have clients that are investing in new tactics, innovating, and using the latest technology. However, one thing that I have noticed is that often technology isn’t built to cater to nonprofit needs, which can be different than business needs. So we are working to fix that in the influencer space so that more nonprofits can invest in creator programmes are reaching out to the younger generation,” the entrepreneur said.

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Published on 04, Apr 2023

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Young agriculturist Rahul Vijayan is leading a mission for a healthier tomorrow

(September 21, 2023) In an era marked by climate uncertainty, dwindling arable land, and a growing global population, the traditional methods of agriculture are facing unprecedented challenges. However, a beacon of hope shines through the innovative and sustainable practice of hydroponics, which is poised to revolutionise the way we grow food. And pioneering this movement is a young Indian American agriculturist, Rahul Vijayan, a junior at Shadowcreek High School in Pearland, Texas, who recently won the prestigious President's Environmental Youth Award (PEYA), 2023. At just 16, this Global Indian has established the nonprofit organisation, called ' Farm to Tray', to enhance access to fresh organic produce in Houston-area schools. "The problem I am seeking to fix is poor child nutrition in American public schools," the agriculturist expressed, adding, "Most students in the USA receive about one-third of the nutrition from unhealthy lunches and breakfasts served in schools. However, I feel that food quality is only the tip of the iceberg; a lack of proper nutrition is detrimental to everything. Students have yet to be taught proper nutritional habits from a young age." Talking about being recognised by the US President for his efforts, he said, "I'm truly honoured, especially being

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erved in schools. However, I feel that food quality is only the tip of the iceberg; a lack of proper nutrition is detrimental to everything. Students have yet to be taught proper nutritional habits from a young age."

Talking about being recognised by the US President for his efforts, he said, "I'm truly honoured, especially being so invested in sustainability and nature and climate change. I always love finding peers who are in the same field as me. I'm even trying to connect with some students there to bring hydroponics to their school and bring some of their projects to mine."

Food for all

The youngster, who has always been fascinated by newer technology and developing alternative methods to help people, embarked on his hydroponic farming journey in 2021 when he interned at Moonflower Farms, a large 20,000-square-foot sustainable greenhouse situated at 3905 Fuqua in Houston. Around the same time, Federico Marques, the CEO and founder of Moonflower Farms, collaborated with Vijayan to introduce hydroponic farming into schools, starting with Shadow Creek High School earlier this year. Their joint efforts resulted in the development of two systems: one, a six-by-four-foot hydroponic farm, allows students to cultivate crops like tomatoes, lettuce, mint, basil, and peppers; the second is a grow kit designed as a small, hands-on laboratory to introduce hydroponics to younger students at the elementary school level.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJHeRqrsI9k

In 2022, Rahul received a $3,200 grant from Earthforce, which funded the creation of the inaugural hydroponic farm in the advanced placement environmental science curriculum at Shadow Creek High School. This hydroponic system has successfully completed six cycles of produce growth. Subsequently, in January, he organised a symposium that inspired teachers throughout Alvin ISD to explore the integration of hydroponic farming into their classrooms. "I realised how big the market is and how teachers actually value this new tool and way of teaching students in a new, fun way," the agriculturist said.

Rahul collaborated with the Children's Environmental Literacy Foundation to supervise hydroponic farming practices in 49 schools spanning Texas, California, New York, and Connecticut. "I'm trying to expand it to more classes and curriculums to utilise this form of handheld teaching and project-based learning," the youngster said.

Agriculturist | Rahul Vijayan | Global Indian

Apart from this, the 16-year-ols is also working on expanding the farming area in Houston. Interestingly, the oncology department at Houston Methodist Hospital in the Texas Medical Center has embraced Rahul's hydroponic farming techniques to establish a therapeutic garden for cancer patients. "Seeing these plants grow right next to them in their bedsite and eating fresh produce really helps boost morale and recovery," the agriculturist said.

The road ahead

Rahul's project combines technology and community responsibility. His efforts involve practical assessments to determine the optimal garden size, and his use of hydroponic technology eliminates the need for genetically modified organisms (GMOs) or pesticides, all while conserving space and water. Not only has the agriculturist introduced this technology to his community, but he also encourages others to embrace it. "I will continue to work on this project for a long time to come," he said, "My goal, although it's rather ambitious, is to have every American public school utilise hydroponic infrastructure to curb this problem of nationwide poor nutrition in schools."

[caption id="attachment_33192" align="aligncenter" width="633"]Agriculturist | Rahul Vijayan | Global Indian Rahul Vijayan has put together a first-of-its-kind hydroponic symposium[/caption]

The agriculturist is currently collaborating with the City of Pearland, Kroger grocery stores, and even NASA to share the benefits of his project with a broader audience. Moreover, he plans to establish new gardens in other schools, with a comprehensive seven-step plan for hydroponic implementation across school districts and states. His garden and teachings serve as an inspiration for others to incorporate fresh, organic produce into school lunches while instilling the principles of sustainable agriculture in the student curriculum.

Agriculturist | Rahul Vijayan | Global Indian

"Eventually, I want my school's student body to run the programme within the environmental club. The produce generated by this cultivation would be used in the school cafeteria system. I plan to expand to eight already interested schools by March next year in my district alone. Although in parallel, I am working with schools and teachers from Ghana, India, and other US states," said the agriculturist.

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swiitchbeauty: How Rabia Ghoor built one of South Africa’s largest cosmetics brands

(July 28, 2024) She's a millionaire running her own fashion brand, is called the Kylie Jenner of South Africa and has even been cancelled by actor Halle Berry on Jimmy Kimmel Live! All this by the age of 23. Rabia Ghoor began her own 'swiitchbeauty' cosmetics brand when she was 14 years old. Less than a decade later, her community-centric, tech-enabled cosmetics company has grown to become one of South Africa's largest skincare brands. 'for lazy people, by even lazier people, since 2014', she writes, on the swiitchbeauty website - her products reflect this, they're meant for young people with hectic schedules, who are looking for a fuss-free, easy to use line of cosmetics, that fit somewhere between high-end products and pharmacy brands.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Rabia Ghoor (@rabiaghoor) The entrepreneurship mindset If entrepreneurship is a mindset, then this intrepid  young Global Indian embodies the idea. Growing up in Pretoria, the capital city of South Africa, Rabia's entrepreneurial forays began much before swiitchbeauty - she was finding ways to turn a profit by the time she was 10 years old. "I would go with my father to this bulk buy place and

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;">

 

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A post shared by Rabia Ghoor (@rabiaghoor)

The entrepreneurship mindset

If entrepreneurship is a mindset, then this intrepid  young Global Indian embodies the idea. Growing up in Pretoria, the capital city of South Africa, Rabia's entrepreneurial forays began much before swiitchbeauty - she was finding ways to turn a profit by the time she was 10 years old. "I would go with my father to this bulk buy place and get stickers. Those were very cool at the time, so I would take my table outside and sell the stickers I bought," she said. When her classmates decided "they were too lazy to walk to the dustbin to throw their trash," Rabia bought a bunch of small buckets, which she sold to them. They could fill the buckets with trash and empty them in the bin later, saving them multiple trips up and down.

As she and her friends began experimenting with makeup for the first time, Rabia discovered the joys of YouTube. She sought out beauty influencers who shared makeup tutorials and product reviews to get tips. Rabia realised that most of these influencers lived abroad, and that there weren't many people in South Africa doing it. Also, the influencers had access to a much wider range of products. "American, European or Asian brands that are unavailable here in South Africa were constantly innovating and evolving - especially in the digital space - while South African brands lagged behind, or just straight up didn't exist," she writes. Her friends would pull out expensive little vanity cases and show off the branded make up they had brought abroad, which were simply impossible to find in South Africa.

Unlike most teenagers, who might have thought about the problem and moved on, Rabia wondered why she couldn't be the one to fill that gap. The project took shape from a "4 square meter area" in her bedroom.  While selling stickers and buckets in the school playground is one thing, building a company was a whole other ballgame, as Rabia soon learned.

Making the ‘swiitch’

Rabia also took inspiration from her father, an intrepid businessman himself, who had dropped out of high school too, and seen a string of successes and failures as an entrepreneur. He even gave her a seed fund of R6000 and gave her resources for product sourcing, formulation, e-commerce, packaging, manufacturing and design. to create a beauty brand that was easy on the pocket and which made products that were actually suited to daily use. "Things that did what they said they were going to do," is how Rabia puts it.

Rabia had no high school diploma, let alone an MBA. She functioned from instinct, learning as much as she could from the internet - it meant learning from scratch, how are products made, packaged, distributed and sold? How is a brand created? She knew that her company would cater to the gap in the South African market, and provide goods and services that were world class but easy on the pocket at the same time. "I began by asking myself why I liked a particular product, and it usually came down to specific ingredients and manufacturing techniques," she said. "Doing research on these ingredients and techniques was very beneficial."

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by swiitchbeauty® (@swiitchbeauty)

Building her brand

In 2015, she made her first sale. "I didn't sleep at all during that first year," she has said, many times over. "I would be up till 3 am packaging orders, then wake up at 6 am to get to school. I was exhausted." Her exhaustion soon began to show and one morning, when she walked downstairs, her mother simply said, "Rabia, you're not going to school today, are you?" Rabia said no. "You're not going back ever, are you," her mum continued. And Rabia said no, again. That's how she quit high school at the age of 15, in 2016, to build a business as her classmates planned outfits for the end-of-year dance. "I just never went back," she laughs, as she recalls. Her parents had seen her running the business for over a year by that time, and had full faith in her. "My parents had seen what I could do with putting only half my attention into it," she says.

The realisation that she was in an unpleasant rut motivated her to get going. Her parents had just let her be to find her own way, which Rabia is grateful for always. She had to return to her bottom line, and why she had started swiitchbeauty in the first place. She listened to motivational podcasts and focussed on structuring her days and growing her business. Fortunately, order was restored quickly and Rabia hired four people to her staff.

What began an idea, with an Instagram page and two products, now has a long range of cosmetics and over 100k followers on Instagram. "I wanted a tech-enabled, affordable-priced and transparent beauty brand," she said. It was to be a homegrown product that her fellow South Africans, irrespective of race and gender, would be proud to use everyday. That's not the brand's only USP, though. swiitchbeauty stands apart from its competitors because Rabia and her team are constantly engaging with and interacting with her customers on Instagram. They get feedback and new ideas straight from her followers, along with educational tutorials made by real people who actually used swiitchbeauty products everyday. That's why she stresses on being a "tech-enabled" brand, dealing with a tech-savvy young market. "Social media has been a gift to our generation of businesses," she says. They tap into local social media influencers as well, which helped amplify the brand's customer base.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by swiitchbeauty® (@swiitchbeauty)

"I am focussing on dominating the market of South African beauty enthusiasts before branching out into the more competitive international field," she says. "I also feel that for now the rest of the world is well-taken care of in terms of make-up." Her 'vocal for local' approach has helped her grow the company tremendously, into one of the country's biggest beauty brands. The "money has been great too," she said in an interview, "but at present turnover is not my core focus. My main purpose is to provide my customers with the best product at the best price and build a sustainable business that will bear fruit in the future."

Follow swiitchbeauty on Instagram.

 

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Penn Masala: From the White House to the Paris Olympics 2024, the boy band takes the world stage

President Joe Biden invited Penn Masala, the premier South Asian a cappella boy group to perform at the White House when Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the United States last year. Mathematics student Raghunandan Raman, who serves as the current president of the band called it an “opportunity of a lifetime.”  Penn Masala, the University of Pennsylvania’s boy-band composed mostly of Indian descent students, has gained wide recognition for blending Eastern and Western influences to bridge cultural divides through their music. This year, the acclaimed a cappella (without instrumental accompaniment) band performed at the inaugural India House at the Paris Olympics 2024. India House, a collaboration between the Reliance Foundation and the Indian Olympic Association, aimed to boost Indian athletes' performances, support national sports federations, and position India as a potential future host of the Olympic Games. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AV5sbxwgb8   Conceptualised by Nita Ambani and her team, the India House in Paris showcased the rich legacy of Indian music and celebrating India in a grand style. In addition to music, it featured craft installations, yoga sessions, and dance performances. Penn Masala artists who have performed across the United States, in India and other locations of the world were thrilled about performing

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featured craft installations, yoga sessions, and dance performances. Penn Masala artists who have performed across the United States, in India and other locations of the world were thrilled about performing during the most coveted sporting event in Paris.

Penn Masala

The boy-band is an evolving group composed of students from the University of Pennsylvania. The group's membership changes regularly as veteran members graduate and new members join through auditions. While most of Penn Masala's members are of Indian descent, the group has also had non-Indian members. During significant performances, the former members also join.

Founded in 1996 by South Asian students of the University of Pennsylvania, the band is recognised as the world's first South Asian a cappella group. It was established with the aim of creating music that crosses traditional cultural boundaries and reflects the experience of growing up with both Eastern and Western influences.

“It was formed by a group of four guys, who saw that a cappella was a big thing across college campuses, but a lot of music that they grew up listening to wasn’t being expressed in this art form. They probably questioned “Why not us? Why can't South Asians also be a part of this?” shared alumni Saaketh Narayan talking about how Penn Masala got started. “Back then, it wasn't cool to be Indian or South Asian. It took guts to do what a lot of art groups and the founders of Penn Masala did,” he added.

[caption id="attachment_38670" align="aligncenter" width="719"]Indian artists | Penn Masala | Global Indian A Penn Masala performance in 2016[/caption]

 

Although the group members have always been in their 20s, in its 28-year-journey, Penn Masala has managed to appeal audiences of all age groups while performing at biggest venues across the US and beyond. Apart from releasing 12 full-length albums it has also performed for the Indian Filmfare Awards, and for heads-of-state, prominent businessmen, and international leaders including Barack Obama, Henry Kissinger, Ban Ki-moon, Mukesh Ambani, among others.

The group also had a cameo role in the Hollywood movie Pitch Perfect 2, released in 2015. The movie received the American Music Award for Best Soundtrack.

The homecoming India tours

Apart from several domestic, Canada and UK tours, US-based Penn Masala has travelled to India multiple times. In 2006, the group celebrated its 10th anniversary with a tour of India. Their most recent tour to India was in May 2023 when they performed seven shows across Goa, Mumbai, Pune, Delhi, Hyderabad and Bangalore. “It provided us with unique experiences. The love and adulation of fans was of next level. They made poems and art for us,” said one of the performers.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p8FGKCFYdlA

Balancing worlds

The loving audience sometimes tends to forget that the Penn Masala artists are at the university to study and that singing is just an additional activity for them. For all of them music is a great break from their academic rigour and professional aspirations – ‘an outlet to step away from the stress, hang out with an awesome group of guys, and jam’.

The current members Raghunandan Raman, Gaurish Gaur, Riju Datta, Venugopal Chillal, Ajay Kilambi, Prateek Adurty, Rohit Rajagopalan and Aryaman Meswani are all studying different subjects at the University of Pennsylvania but has music in common.

The current Penn Masala president Raghunandan was born in Bangor, India. His family moved to the United States when he was young. “I’ve been part of two worlds,” he remarked, “One American growing up in New Jersey and the other at home with my parents and family steeped in Indian culture, including music. Penn Masala combines both the Western and the Indian side of me, and I feel fortunate to be a part of this group and experience that.”

Like him, Penn Masala has had members who were born in India but raised in the US, as well as those who were completely born and brought up in the US. Regardless of their place of birth, Raghunandan's words resonate with all of them.

 

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A post shared by Penn Masala (@pennmasala)

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Oyon Ganguly: Indian American teen’s attempt to conserve and reuse water

(April 12, 2023) It was the viral ALS ice-bucket challenge - wherein participants dump buckets of cold water on each other’s heads - that made the then nine-year-old Oyon Ganguly come up with an idea of a water-recycling device as he was surprised by the terrible waste of water. 10-minute shower wastes 50 gallons of water - this piece of information was enough for this Indian American to come up with The Cleaner - a water recycling prototype that filters water to be re-used in the shower. The invention won this Massachusetts resident Invention Mighty Minds contest, a national-level contest run jointly by the National Inventors Hall of Fame (NIHF) which acts as America’s platform for budding young inventors. "I asked my mom how much water is used in a single shower and I learned that around 50 gallons of water is used in a single use. Multiply that by five people taking 20-minute showers, that's around 500 gallons," he said in a YouTube video. This was enough for him to come up with a device that could recycle and reuse water that drains away during a shower. His invention was made inside a strawberry box that held three layers

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ice that could recycle and reuse water that drains away during a shower. His invention was made inside a strawberry box that held three layers of cleaning material--gravel, sand, and charcoal.

Explaining how his invention works, the Global Indian said in an interview, "When someone takes a shower, the water goes down the drain and through the pipe before it reaches a filter with three layers: gravel, sand, and charcoal. The water, which is now clean and filtered, sits in a storage tank before it gets pumped back up to the bathtub. Because over time, the filter gets clogged, there will be a little door to make sure you get access to the filter."

The grandson of Bengali novelist and Sahitya Akademi award-winner Sunil Gangopadhyay, Oyon took the help of his friend Mateo Rosado for the filtering process. Oyon reveals that his invention can save both water and money. "Even though the invention can be expensive, it saves the government from spending more money to get water and also reduced your water bill," he explained in the video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RsSolEq5vZY

He credits his mother for making him participate in the Mighty Minds competition. "I went to Camp Invention in Watertown. We build things with recycled materials and my shower model was built mostly with recycled stuff. I spent an hour over two weekends putting together the presentation," he said.

Oyon has worked on another invention idea - The Space Cleaner - a solar-powered robot with one arm that melts space junk and the other arm vacuums up the melted liquid. The idea for this came to him while watching Apollo 13 with his parents. The Indian American thought to himself, “What happens to everything that’s flying off the ship into space?”

He plans to be one of the three things when he grows up - an inventor, work at Lego, or for Mojang (the company that develops the video game Minecraft).

 

Reading Time: 4 min

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Vihaan Talya Vikas: The 10-year-old Indian boy is named Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2023

(November 22, 2023) With a Canon EOS 7D strapped onto his shoulder, 10-year-old Vihaan Talya Vikas took off a few kilometers north to the Bengaluru airport in search of that perfect shot. Drawn to an ancient tamarind grove, he marched in deeper adjusting his telephoto lens. That's when a wall on the other side grabbed his attention. For any other person, it would have been a normal sight - a spider on a wall, but for Vihaan, it spoke volumes. Seeing an ornamental tree trunk spider right next to an idol of Lord Krishna put him in a trance, as in that moment all he could perceive was an image of a spider entranced by the sound of Krishna's flute. He sealed the moment in his DSLR as a photographic memory and it was this unique representation that made his photograph stand out and helped him win the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2023 in the under-10 category. "I am very happy and excited to receive this award. I like doing photography because it helps us think creatively and connect with nature," Vihaan said after winning the coveted prize. Organised by The Natural History Museum in London, the competition highlights

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mpetition highlights the world's most exceptional wildlife photography. This event is often dubbed the "Oscars of Photography" due to its renowned status.

[caption id="attachment_34241" align="aligncenter" width="740"]Vihaan Talya Vikas | Global Indian The award-winning photo clicked by Vihaan Talya Vikas[/caption]

This year that competition saw entries from 95 countries across the globe with a total of 50,000 images being submitted. Out of the lot, only the top 100 made it to the competition and 11 were chosen in different categories. Vihaan's win is a testament to a photographer’s skill, vision, and ability to communicate the essence of the wild through their art. Commenting on Vihaan's photograph, Dhritiman Mukherjee, Wildlife and Conservation Photographer and Competition Judge, said, "This image conveys so many interesting things to me. What I like most is the thought process behind it and the composition of the image. it talks about coexistence very nicely. The inclusion of a historic sculpture adds a different dimension to the concept. Then here we are, seeing a spider - a smaller and less attended life form. So for me, this one served the purpose of art, concept, conservation, and science very nicely."

The photograph titled The Wall of Wonder will become a part of the WPY59 collection and will be featured in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Exhibition held at the Natural History Museum. This exhibition is set to travel to approximately 25 locations across four continents, aiming to raise awareness about wildlife conservation, using powerful imagery to connect people with the natural world.

[caption id="attachment_34246" align="aligncenter" width="726"]Vihaan Talya Vikas | Global Indian Vihaan Talya Vikas[/caption]

A student of Kumarans School, Bangalore, Vihaan's love for photography began at the age of seven when he often accompanied his dad for wildlife safaris. It was his father's love for photography that rubbed onto him. What's intriguing is his affinity for macro and telephoto lenses, showcasing his versatility and keen eye for intricate details. His photography captures not only the magnificence of wildlife but also the beauty of smaller creatures.

Vihaan, who is also interested in astronomy, is keen to showcase his love for science and the exploration of the natural world in all its forms. Using his camera, Vihaan combines a curious scientist's mindset with an artistic soul. His accomplishment not only shows his unique talent but also inspires people of all ages. It reminds us of the strong link between humans and wildlife and emphasises the art that connects us to both.

 

Reading Time: 4 min

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About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

We are looking for role models, mentors and counselors who can help Indian youth who aspire to become Global Indians.

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