Orange Chowk started with a simple frustration, creatives in India weren't being seen for what they truly do.
And over time, something shifted. They stopped seeing it themselves.
Creatives shaped culture once.
They still do. They just stopped believing it.
The ability to make people think, feel, build, remember... it's still theirs. It always was.
We're just here to help them see it again. The proof exists. We just keep bringing it to the creatives.
What pulled us to Teatro Dhora is the role it plays in helping people discover.
Independent designers. Makers. Creative voices. Work that deserves attention but doesn't always demand it loudly.
And that matters, especially now. Because visibility is increasingly shaped by algorithms, trends, and whoever can shout the loudest.
What Aavriti reminds us is that creative ecosystems grow because someone chooses to champion the work they believe in. To create space for it. To introduce it to new audiences. To help it find the people who will appreciate it.
The result is something much larger than a store. It becomes a platform for discovery. A place where people encounter ideas, practices, and makers they may never have found on their own.
And that's why this conversation matters. Because creatives need to hear from people who understand the importance of advocacy. People who know that helping great work get seen is a creative act in itself.
And that's why this feels like the kind of conversation that belongs with Aavriti R. Jain, at Teatro Dhora.
- orange chowk.






















We built this because creatives need a room like this.If Teatro Dhora believes that too, let's figure out what doing this together looks like.