Aliya Ghosh Full Nude--done01-40 Min Access

“You see?” she whispers, pointing at the interplay of shadow, light, and woven air. “Style isn’t about covering the body. It’s about revealing the space where the body meets the world.”

Aliya’s response is characteristically quiet. She installed a “Pay What You Feel” rack at the gallery entrance: rejected sample pieces, mended and sold for ₹200-500. “Minimalism without access is just aesthetics,” she says. “But access without intention is just consumption.” ALIYA GHOSH FULL NUDE--DONE01-40 Min

“Fashion isn’t what you add,” she says, adjusting a single oxidized silver pin on her raw silk blouse. “It’s what you dare to leave out.” “You see

This is the philosophy behind —the country’s first curated archive-gallery hybrid dedicated to minimalism in apparel, accessories, and textile art. Aliya, a 34-year-old former couture buyer turned design anthropologist, founded Min not as a store, but as a “living style library.” The Birth of an Obsession Growing up in a house of maximalists—her mother a Banarasi saree collector, her grandmother a lover of heavy Kundan—Aliya felt suffocated by ornament. “Every family gathering was a competition of embroidery density,” she laughs. But a trip to Kyoto at 22 changed her. She witnessed a kimono restorer who spoke of ma (the Japanese concept of negative space) and wabi-sabi (beauty in imperfection). She installed a “Pay What You Feel” rack

Where less is not a limitation. It is a lens. Open by appointment. Bow Barracks, Kolkata.

“I realized my ‘less’ was actually ‘more’—just a different language of abundance.”