“Each letter is a prayer, a tender return to what the wind once whispered in my mother tongue.” Hiral Bhagat an artist from Gujarat, brings poetry to life through her contemporary exploration of Gujarati calligraphy. She does not merely illustrate words, she transforms them, allowing language to unfold visually— delicate, deliberate, and full of quiet revelation. Each letter becomes both form and feeling, where text is not just read but seen, heard and felt. Her work is a radical dialogue between past and present, between word and world. Letters swell, dissolve, and sometimes hide behind ink, whispering what cannot be spoken aloud. Through this practice, Hiral explores themes of displacement, migration, and identity, with strokes that are intimate yet profoundly universal. Under her hand, the graceful curves of the Gujarati script flow like a river, dancing across the canvas like Sufi dervishes— whirling, seeking, surrendering. For Hiral Bhagat, script is not merely written, it is home.