An intimate exhibition where portraits speak through gaze, memory, and unspoken emotion, says SAKSHI PRIYA
Belonging often reveals itself in the quiet moments, in the eyes of someone who has seen much, said little, and yet left a lasting mark. Homecoming: Echoes of Belonging, curated by Georgina Maddox, captures this essence with extraordinary grace. Artist Shana Sood presents a deeply intimate collection, where every portrait carries the quiet weight of lived experience and silent stories waiting to be heard.
Shana, a self-taught artist, uses portraiture to bridge identities shaped by place, culture and memory. Many of her works centre around Indian womanhood, the Diaspora experience, and the subtle threads that tie people to one another across time and space.
Among the most moving works in the exhibition is ‘Storytelling’ — a portrait of a man who has worked in her home for many years. Though he cannot speak and lives with several disabilities, he communicates volumes through his eyes. “He can’t hear fully and he doesn’t speak, but somehow he knows everything,” Shana shared. “He tells stories — without a word-just like a storyteller.” The painting captures the silent wisdom of someone who has seen more than he lets on, someone whose gaze holds memory, mischief and emotion in equal measure.
Through this portrait, artist honours a man whose life is full of unspoken narratives, proving that silence too can be expressive.
Another standout piece is ‘Dusky Bride’ — the artist’s personal favourite. The bride, depicted with a warm medium skin tone, is striking not only in her traditional attire but in her quiet strength. Her beauty lies not just in how she looks, but in how she carries herself-confident, self-aware, and luminous from within. The portrait challenges narrow beauty standards and celebrates women who embody both heritage and individuality. There’s a quiet resistance in the way the bride meets your gaze, proud of who she is and where she comes from.
Each canvas feels like an encounter-offering space to reflect and feel the subtle connections between lives and to brings forward untold stories of people who might otherwise be overlooked.