Artwork, pictures create areas for reflection: CJI Surya Kant
Chief Justice of India Surya Kant on Tuesday stated artwork and pictures usually grow to be areas of reflection and contemplation inside judicial households, including that in more and more stressed occasions, artwork teaches us to decelerate and observe extra deeply.

The CJI was inaugurating a nature and panorama pictures exhibition curated by Jhuma Datta, spouse of Supreme Courtroom choose Dipankar Datta, and praised the exhibition for its exploration of 4 themes: silence, circulation, rhythm and power.
“The judiciary is usually seen solely by the lens of judgments, courtrooms and constitutional questions. However behind these establishments are lives which have artistic pursuits and search reflection, stillness and emotional stability. Artwork and pictures create these areas of pause and contemplation inside judicial households,” the CJI emphasised.
The exhibition, titled Prakriti-Raga, introduced collectively panorama and nature pictures capturing waterfalls, glacial rivers, snow-covered terrain, forests, rocky coastlines and expansive skies. Organised round themes similar to “Silence”, “Move”, “Rhythm” and “Power”, the exhibition mixed visible imagery with reflective textual content installations inviting viewers to “decelerate, observe, and really feel extra deeply”.
Talking on the occasion, Datta stated her work emerged from a long-standing private reference to nature.
“Nature has at all times felt deeply alive to me — not silent within the literal sense, however filled with presence, rhythm and emotion. Via these pictures, I needed to seize moments the place one can pause and reconnect with one thing bigger than oneself,” she stated.
Datta added that she is drawn to every part about “Mom Nature”. “Altering gentle, flowing water, quiet forests and huge skies… they consistently remind us of impermanence, stability and renewal,” she stated, including that her exhibition is an invite to understand nature as an area of consciousness, connection and quiet continuity.
Members of Delhi’s authorized and cultural circles, together with sitting and former Supreme Courtroom and excessive courtroom judges and artists, attended the exhibition.

