Sangita Jindal, Chairperson of JSW Foundation, has significantly impacted India’s social and cultural landscape over the past three decades.
Under her leadership and strategic direction, JSW Foundation, the social development arm of the JSW Group (one of India’s leading conglomerates) has an established track record and a legacy of enabling holistic change across communities around India.
A visionary who believes in the transformative power of art, Sangita set up the Jindal Arts Creative Interaction Centre (JACIC) at the National Centre for the Performing Arts (NCPA) in 1994. She also publishes ART India Magazine, which has been a chronicler of the Indian art scene since 1996.
As one of India’s most prominent philanthropists, patrons and collectors, she has supported art and heritage through numerous projects, both at home and globally. Her efforts to preserve heritage for future generations led to extensive restoration work at the Hampi temple complex in the southern Indian state of Karnataka, and the Keneseth Eliyahoo Synagogue and iconic David Sassoon Library and Reading Room in Mumbai, Maharashtra. The projects received conservation awards and an award of merit respectively from UNESCO.
She has recently undertaken the restoration of the Shalimar Bagh - the world-renowned Mughal Garden in Srinagar, Kashmir.
Sangita founded Hampi Art Labs, an art residency and exhibition space aimed at nurturing artists globally. She encourages and invests in art as a practice. She supports the AD x JSW Prize for Contemporary Craftsmanship.
Sangita is an Eisenhower Fellow, serving on the Board of Trustees of the World Monuments Fund - India Chapter. She is a member of the Tate International Council, the UN Women Business Sector Advisory Council (BSAC) and a global trustee of Asia Society. She has also been elected as Chairperson of the Asia Society India Centre in 2024. She is a member of the Advisory Board of the British Asian Trust and also serves as an Advisory Board Member of Meyer Paediatric Hospital, Florence, Italy.
She joined the Advisory Council of the Kochi Biennale Foundation, host of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, Asia’s largest and most influential contemporary art festival.
Sangita was recognized by Vogue India as ‘Heritage Keeper of the Year’ in 2019 in their Women of the Year awards in recognition of her work preserving cultural heritage in India. She also received the Golden Peacock Award for Social and Cultural Leadership 2019.
Most recently, in Sep 2025, she was conferred the Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, one of the most prestigious honours bestowed by the French Government, in recognition of her outstanding contribution to arts, culture, and heritage conservation.