Tag: Studio Eeksaurus

  • Design trunk calls as Kyoorius hands out Black Blue and Red Elephants

    Design trunk calls as Kyoorius hands out Black Blue and Red Elephants

    MUMBAI: It was an evening where design roared louder than words and elephants ruled the room. The 2025 Kyoorius Design Awards and Kyoorius Young Blood Awards, both presented by Zee, wrapped up in style at the Taj Cidade de Goa, Horizon, with over 1,000 members of India’s design fraternity cheering the winners.

    After three days of Designyatra, India’s biggest anti-disciplinary design conference, the awards night saw the stage lit up by the much-coveted elephants. The spotlight first swung to the Young Blood Awards, the only platform in India dedicated to nurturing the next generation of creatives. Tasked with cracking live briefs from Ather and Bingo! (ITC Foods), young designers delivered big: out of 475 plus entries, 63 made it to The First List, and finally 22 entries claimed Baby Red Elephants. The night then revealed the majestic 6 Red Elephant winners, the ultimate nod to fresh, fearless talent.

    The headline act of the evening was the Kyoorius Design Awards itself. From over 700 entries, only 75 projects managed to take home Baby Blue Elephants. Among them, 23 stood tall as Blue Elephant winners, each piece recognised for setting new benchmarks in creativity and craft. But the true rarities were the 2 Black Elephants, reserved exclusively for the Best of Show. This year, they went to ‘Naatak’, a stunning font project by typography studio Ektype, and ‘Desi Oon’, an animated long-form film by Studio Eeksaurus for the Centre For Pastoralism.

    Unlike traditional award shows that deal in gold, silver and bronze, Kyoorius keeps it delightfully democratic: only work that truly deserves it wins an Elephant. Baby Elephants mark disruptive and showcase-worthy ideas, Blue Elephants signal industry-defining excellence, and Black Elephants represent work that not only takes risks but creates conversations with lasting cultural impact.

    The grand gala capped off what many in the industry now call the “festival of ideas” where design isn’t just celebrated but canonised. For the winners, carrying home a Kyoorius Elephant isn’t just an award; it’s an entry into a creative hall of fame where originality trumps hierarchy and risk-taking is the ultimate reward.

  • Three Indian entries win for best TV production at Apollo Awards

    Three Indian entries win for best TV production at Apollo Awards

    NEW DELHI: Indians won three awards out of the eight entries shortlisted for the Apollo Awards for television programming in Asia to be presented in Singapore.

     
    There were a total of 15 categories for the awards. 

    The awards are to be presented on 18 June in conjunction with BroadcastAsia 2014 – the 19th International Digital Multimedia & Entertainment Technology Exhibition and Conference, at Marina Bay Sands, Singapore.

     

    While Studio Eeksaurus Production Pvt Ltd, India won two awards for Art Direction (Sandeep Shelhar & Ashok – Kitkat Astronaut- Diwali) and 2D Animation (Arun Rane & Sunita Kathiwada – Rotary Fateline), the third prize went to Prime Focus in Visual Effects/CGI – Long Form (Stefen Fangmeier & Merzin Tavaria – Sin City: A Dame to Kill For).

     

    Launched in 2005, the Apollo Awards is an initiative aimed at honouring the best in production and post-production across Asia Pacific, with a strong focus on the creative and technical mastery behind the scenes.

     
    The 23-member jury included one Indian – Studio Eeksaurus founder and creative director Suresh Eriyat.

    The Apollo awards had been introduced to recognize the fluid nature of talent migration in the production and post-production industry, coupled with the growth of Asia Pacific’s media and entertainment industry, has drawn top talent to the region and elevated the quality of work produced in this region.

     
    Since the launch of its new and improved version in 2013, the Apollo Awards has garnered attention from industry players as the nature of the awards is uncommon in this region.