Amruta Patil worked as a copywriter at Enterprise Nexus (Mumbai) in 1999-2000.[2] She was the co-founder and editor of the quarterly magazine, 'Mindfields' (2007-2012).[4] She was awarded a TED Fellowship in 2009.[5]
Graphic Novels
Amruta Patil debut graphic novel, Kari, commissioned and published by VK Karthika at HarperCollins India, explored themes of sexuality, friendship and death; and heralded Patil as India's first female graphic novelist.[6][7] A self proclaimed "oddball" who grew up in a small town without much exposure to comics culture, Patil has spoken about her autodidactic process and evolving style.[8]Kari has been the subject of various academic dissertations.[9][10]
Her two subsequent graphic novels Adi Parva: Churning of the Ocean and Sauptik: Blood and Flowers[11] form the Parva Duology which retells stories from the Mahabharata from the viewpoint of the outlier narrators (sutradhar) Ganga and Ashwatthama respectively. Speaking about these two novels, she talks about her decision to choose the two above-mentioned narrators because of their peripheral role in traditional retellings of the lore.[12] The importance of the sutradhar has been reiterated - as a "way of bringing the stories closer to the present."[13]
Her fourth graphic novel - Aranyaka[15] - came about after conversations with her friend, the mythologist Devdutt Pattanaik.[16]Aranyaka was first published by Westland in 2019, and then by HarperCollins India in 2023.[17]
After a decade-long association with "comic book capital" Angoulême (France) and La Maison des Auteurs,[18] a juried residency for comic book auteurs, Patil relocated to India in 2019.
Amruta Patil had a solo show called Altar[19][20] at the Serendipity Arts Festival 2019. She started painting grand format acrylic tableaus in 2020.
She is the co-founder of Qomix, the world’s first non fiction comics app.
^"La Maison des Auteurs". la Cité internationale de la bande dessinée et de l'image. 2017. Archived from the original on 3 July 2022. Retrieved 16 February 2020.