Her murals and installations draw inspiration from architectural masters like Carlo Scarpa, Le Corbusier, and Burle Marx, yet her interpretations remain unmistakably her own: poetic, Indian in spirit, and deeply sensory. From the sculptural “Ghat” series inspired by Mathura and Varanasi, to tributes like The Malabar Architecture and Contours of Nature, Rutva reimagines space as something sacred and alive.
Every work is a meditation on material, time, and craftsmanship. Whether etched in Agra red sandstone or cast in minimalist marble, her art celebrates balance between permanence and change, geometry and emotion, form and silence. For Rutva, time is not a constraint but a collaborator; her pieces are designed to age, gathering depth and resonance over time, shaped by the spaces and lives they accompany.
Her murals adorn private homes, architectural studios, and public spaces across India, becoming part of the environments they inhabit and as quiet statements of identity. To collect her work is to collect a piece of architecture in motion: tactile, contemplative, and timeless.














