Rescripting calligraphy’s fate in Bhopal
Bhopal: Between ink and silence, an almost forgotten rhythm is slowly returning to Bhopal’s tempo, rescripting fading fates.
Calligraphy is undergoing a quiet resurgence in city as a younger gaze falls on it. The artform is being reshaped by digital visibility, finding a second life not through institutions, but through screens.
Short videos and reels online show ink spreading across paper, letters forming in real time, and designs unfolding in seconds. What once lived in archives and old inscriptions is now circulating on social media feeds, drawing in a younger audience with visual immediacy and urgency.
“The interest has definitely grown again,” says Arshmah Khan, who observes learners experimenting with traditional scripts and design forms. “People are seeing it in a completely new way now — more as art and design than just writing.”
Arshmah Khan holds a Harvard World Records title for the smallest Arabic calligraphy on a gram pulse.
At its core, calligraphy still rests on control — proportion, rhythm, structure — but its expression has widened. Letters no longer remain confined to rigid forms. They stretch, bend, and transform into visual compositions that sit somewhere between text and image.
“We start with an outline,” Arshmah says. “Then the lettering is shaped within it. That’s where it becomes design.”
For Vakil Bastavi, an expert and instructor, the change is visible in how the craft is being approached.
“Earlier it was more closed and formal,” he says. “Now people are discovering it online and experimenting more freely with styles.”
That shift has also changed how the art travels across space and time. Instead of passing slowly through physical spaces, calligraphy now moves instantly — shared, remixed, reinterpreted. A single video can spark curiosity far beyond the classroom.
In Bhopal, that visibility is reflected in rising interest.
“Courses fill up quickly,” says Nusrat Mehdi, director of the MP Urdu Academy. “There are always more people than we can take.”
“This is not a disappearing art. It is one that keeps returning in new forms, depending on how each generation engages with it.”
Yet what draws people in is not speed, but the contrast it offers to it — the slow formation of letters in a fast-moving digital world.
Outside the scroll of screens, the city still holds traces of older forms — carved lines on walls, fading inscriptions on stone. Inside, a new generation is beginning to respond to those forms again, but through a modern lens.
There is no formal revival campaign, no declared return. Just a steady rediscovery — one video, one stroke, one experiment at a time. And in that quiet circulation of ink and image, calligraphy begins to find its place again.
Short videos and reels online show ink spreading across paper, letters forming in real time, and designs unfolding in seconds. What once lived in archives and old inscriptions is now circulating on social media feeds, drawing in a younger audience with visual immediacy and urgency.
“The interest has definitely grown again,” says Arshmah Khan, who observes learners experimenting with traditional scripts and design forms. “People are seeing it in a completely new way now — more as art and design than just writing.”
Arshmah Khan holds a Harvard World Records title for the smallest Arabic calligraphy on a gram pulse.
At its core, calligraphy still rests on control — proportion, rhythm, structure — but its expression has widened. Letters no longer remain confined to rigid forms. They stretch, bend, and transform into visual compositions that sit somewhere between text and image.
“We start with an outline,” Arshmah says. “Then the lettering is shaped within it. That’s where it becomes design.”
“Earlier it was more closed and formal,” he says. “Now people are discovering it online and experimenting more freely with styles.”
That shift has also changed how the art travels across space and time. Instead of passing slowly through physical spaces, calligraphy now moves instantly — shared, remixed, reinterpreted. A single video can spark curiosity far beyond the classroom.
In Bhopal, that visibility is reflected in rising interest.
“Courses fill up quickly,” says Nusrat Mehdi, director of the MP Urdu Academy. “There are always more people than we can take.”
“This is not a disappearing art. It is one that keeps returning in new forms, depending on how each generation engages with it.”
Yet what draws people in is not speed, but the contrast it offers to it — the slow formation of letters in a fast-moving digital world.
Outside the scroll of screens, the city still holds traces of older forms — carved lines on walls, fading inscriptions on stone. Inside, a new generation is beginning to respond to those forms again, but through a modern lens.
There is no formal revival campaign, no declared return. Just a steady rediscovery — one video, one stroke, one experiment at a time. And in that quiet circulation of ink and image, calligraphy begins to find its place again.
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