Ira had eleven colours in her paint box and a problem that none of them
could solve.
Her art teacher, Mrs. Kulkarni, had given the class an assignment for the
Pune district exhibition: paint something invisible. "Not invisible like
a ghost," Mrs. Kulkarni had said, waving her hands in a way that made her
glass bangles clink. "Invisible like wind. Or love. Or time. Something
real that you cannot see."
The other students had groaned. Ira had not. She had stared at the blank
sheet of handmade paper — rough, cream-coloured, with tiny threads of
cotton trapped in it — and felt a small thrill. This was the kind of
problem she liked.
She decided to draw the wind.
For three days, she watched. She sat on the balcony of her flat in Kothrud
and watched the neem tree across the road. When the wind came, the branches
bent and the small green leaves shivered in a wave, starting from the top
and rippling down. She noticed how the wind picked up dust in tiny spirals
on the road below, how it pressed her mother's saris flat against the
clothesline, how it made the stray dog on the corner squint and turn
its face away.
She painted all of it. The bending tree. The spiral of dust. A girl on a
bicycle with her dupatta streaming behind her like a kite. Clothes pressed
flat. Leaves caught mid-flight between one branch and the ground.
But she did not paint the wind itself. She couldn't. It had no colour, no
shape, no edges.
When she brought the painting to class, Mrs. Kulkarni held it up. The
other children leaned forward.
"But where is the wind?" a boy named Sahil asked. "I see the tree bending
and the dupatta flying, but I don't see the wind."
Mrs. Kulkarni looked at Ira.
Ira felt her ears go warm. She almost said "I couldn't figure it out."
But then she looked at her own painting — really looked — and understood
something she hadn't understood when she was painting it.
"That's the point," she said slowly. "You can only see it through what
it touches."
Mrs. Kulkarni set the painting down gently. "Some things in this world
are like that, Ira. The most powerful things — love, goodness, the spirit
inside every living creature — you will never see them directly. But look
at what they move, what they bend, what they make fly. That is how you
know they are real."
Ira's painting won second place at the district exhibition. But the prize
she remembered most was the quiet moment in class when she understood:
the formless is not empty. It is simply too large to fit inside a shape.