Ruchira’s paintings, with the little accounts accompanying them, continue this tradition of representing life, labour, land, and community, in a seamless continuity with each other. As Shanti goes up the terrace to dry clothes, Ruchira goes up with her and watches the station and the trains, signs of modernity close but distant in the milieu, while her father and brother play carrom on the porch. Fruit sellers, street musicians, and the paan shop make a noisy carnival that draws minute and intricate dabs of colour from Ruchira’s brush, childishly eclectic and yet with a deep, subtle design behind them. Under the banyan tree, the hanuman idol offers faith and community, while the Dalit colony, not far away, offers a different range of colours — both physical and metaphorical. As the painter’s gaze flits between indoor spaces, the organic difference in these communities — between a man reading from a scroll to a community of listeners, and Ruchira’s family eating from beautiful stainless steel thalis, with her grandmother’s name engraved on them — shapes a narrative of scattered, plural aesthetics that offer an invisible, organic unity to this tiny community in Forbesganj, bringing together animals, birds, humans, houses, objects, colour and meandering lines of sheer visual poetry. Even for those of us who have never been to this home, this exhibition feels like a dream homecoming.