Komal Farrukh

Komal Farrukh

Komal Farrukh, who holds a Master's in Archaeology, serves as the Assistant Manager at the National History Museum and possesses eight years of experience as an educator and art instructor. Her background includes extensive work in storytelling, art workshops, and educational programming, driven by a passion for history, culture, and heritage. She recently established her own platform, Fiction and Fun, which focuses on preserving oral tradition through interactive storytelling paired with creative art workshops.

11:00 am - 9:00 pm
Upper Garden

Reimagining Our Planet: An Eco-Co-Creation Map

Interactive

To co-create an interactive map designed to engage visitors, especially children at the WOW Women Festival. We will be re imagining our world centered on a collective art activity where participants co-create a global map, shifting its representation from political borders and national names to a living, integrated system of rivers, birds, plants, and insects.It will generate a powerful visual statement on ecological literacy and the disconnectedness of all life. This will be a two-layered installation, where the underlying layer represents regional carbon emission percentages, physically linking ecological richness with global climate accountability and human impact. The final piece will be a powerful testament to collective environmental consciousness, created by hundreds of hands, demonstrating that Earth is a shared ecosystem, not a collection of independent countries.

11:00 am - 9:00 pm
Upper Garden

Reimagining Our Planet: An Eco-Co-Creation Map

Interactive

To co-create an interactive map designed to engage visitors, especially children at the WOW Women Festival. We will be reimagining our world centered on a collective art activity where participants co-create a global map, shifting its representation from political borders and national names to a living, integrated system of rivers, birds, plants, and insects.It will generate a powerful visual statement on ecological literacy and the interconnectedness of all life. This will be a two-layered installation, where the underlying layer represents regional carbon emission percentages, physically linking ecological richness with global climate accountability and human impact. The final piece will be a powerful testament to collective environmental consciousness, created by hundreds of hands, demonstrating that Earth is a shared ecosystem, not a collection of independent countries.