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Puri Travel Guide Part 15: Sudarshan Craft Museum — Stone Art and the Soul of Odisha

Everything about Sudarshan Craft Museum Puri: Padma Shri Sudarshan Sahoo, stone carvings, Japanese Buddhist temple, timings, entry fee, and why artists love this hidden gem.

Part 15: Sudarshan Craft Museum — Stone Art and the Soul of Odisha

After the sensory overload of the Jagannath Temple — the chanting, the pushing crowd, the heat, the emotion — you need a counterbalance. Somewhere quiet. Somewhere shaded. Somewhere where beauty is not measured in crowds but in the precision of a chisel stroke on stone.

The Sudarshan Craft Museum is that place.

Located on Station Road, approximately 2 kilometres from the Puri Railway Station and an easy auto-rickshaw ride from the temple area, this museum is one of Puri’s best-kept secrets. Most guidebooks give it a single line. Most tourists skip it entirely. That is their loss.

The Man Behind the Museum: Padma Shri Sudarshan Sahoo

The museum was founded by Sudarshan Sahoo, one of India’s most celebrated stone sculptors. Born in 1940 in Puri, Sahoo learned the art of Khondalite stone carving from his father — a tradition that has been practised in Odisha for over a thousand years. His work earned him the Padma Shri in 1988, and he has since become an international figure in the world of sculpture, exhibiting in galleries across Europe and Asia.

The museum is not a vanity project. It is a living workshop and training centre for young Odishan artisans. When you visit, you will see apprentices actively carving sculptures in the open courtyard, continuing a lineage that stretches back to the builders of the Konark Sun Temple.

What You Will See

The museum is compact but rich in content. Here is what to expect:

The main gallery houses dozens of stone sculptures carved from Khondalite (a metamorphic rock native to the Eastern Ghats of Odisha). Subjects include:

  • Hindu deities (Ganesh, Shiva, Vishnu, Lakshmi)
  • Buddhist figures (the museum includes a Japanese-style Buddhist temple on the premises)
  • Mythological scenes from the Ramayana and Mahabharata
  • Abstract and contemporary art pieces
  • Replicas of temple carvings from Konark, Bhubaneswar, and Puri

2. Wood Carving Section

Alongside stone, the museum displays traditional Odishan wood carvings — including representations of Jagannath, Balabhadra, and Subhadra in the distinctive minimalist style unique to this region.

3. Fiberglass Sculptures

Modern fiberglass pieces by Sahoo and his students represent the evolution of traditional forms into contemporary art.

4. Japanese Buddhist Temple

Perhaps the most unexpected feature: a small, serene Japanese-style Buddhist temple located within the museum grounds. Built as a cultural exchange project, this temple provides a peaceful space for meditation, far removed from the chaos of the city.

5. The Open-Air Workshop

Watch artisans at work in the courtyard. The rhythmic sound of chisel on stone, the spray of fine white dust, and the gradual emergence of a deity from a raw block — this is craftsmanship in its most elemental form. If you ask politely, artisans are usually happy to explain their techniques and the symbolism behind their work.

Visiting Details

ParameterDetail
LocationStation Road, Puri (near Puri Railway Station)
Timings8:00 AM to 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM to 8:00 PM
Days OpenMonday to Friday
Days ClosedSaturday and Sunday
Entry Fee₹5 (Indians), ₹50 (Foreign Nationals)
PhotographyGenerally permitted in the courtyard
Time Required30 to 60 minutes

⚠️ Critical Alert: Saturday Closure

The Sudarshan Craft Museum is CLOSED on Saturdays.

Since you are visiting on Saturday, May 9, 2026, the museum will not be open. This is a disappointing but important detail that many travel guides overlook.

Alternatives for Saturday

If you want a cultural break on Saturday, consider:

  1. Narendra Tank (Narendra Pokhari): A beautiful, historic water tank about 2 km from the temple. Free entry, open daily, and serene.

  2. The Grand Road Craft Shops: Several shops on the Bada Danda sell stone carvings, Pattachitra paintings, and local handicrafts. While not as curated as the museum, they offer a similar cultural experience with the added benefit of purchase.

  3. The Raghunandan Library: Located near the temple, this historic library offers a rooftop view of the temple complex and a quiet reading room.

If You Return on a Weekday

If you ever visit Puri again on a Monday-to-Friday schedule, make the Sudarshan Craft Museum your first stop after the temple. At ₹5 entry, it offers extraordinary value — a world-class art experience for the price of a cup of tea.


Next: Part 16: Narendra Tank — The Sacred Lake and Chandan Yatra

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