'Kaleidoscopic Days': A beautiful short book, that particularly concerns with the story of a child, named Acku, who builds his own space-time, a canvas that is to be filled with colors; and delves under his own created art world. In the book, the boundaries between art by children and modern-contemporary art are also addressed to some extent through a visually rich narrative.
His creation of art is not only an attempt to communicate but to enjoy the process of creation itself. In this way he discovers his own symbols, colors, way of drawing, and self art language. He discovered, somehow, a beautiful medium of expression, a randomness of shapes and color, that is beyond his control, but perhaps, it was the beginning of his discovery of the irrational, and hence the abstract. He gravitated toward abstraction in his own way. In his childhood boldness, he followed his own fascination of arbitrary forms with their chromatic sweeps. Some of his works invoke indirect visual references, such as the sheer brilliance of vivid Rajasthani colors of the fabric, or colorful flying kites, which perhaps shaped his sense of aesthetic as a child.