The Architecture of Stillness
In the quiet corners of a library, there is a specific kind of silence that feels heavy, as if it were holding the weight of all the unread pages surrounding it. We often mistake stillness for an absence of action, a pause between breaths, or a failure to move forward. Yet, if you sit with it long enough, you realize that stillness is a deliberate posture. It is a form of listening. To be truly still is to make oneself a vessel, waiting for the world to reveal its own rhythm. It requires a shedding of the ego, a quiet agreement to stop imposing our own noise upon the landscape. We are so often taught that to exist is to exert, to leave a mark, to push against the grain of the day. But what if the most profound way to inhabit a space is simply to be present within it, alert and unmoving, like a stone in a riverbed? Does the river know the stone is there, or does it simply flow around the grace of its patience?

Saniar Rahman Rahul has captured this exact quality of waiting in his work titled Grey-headed Lapwing. It is a reminder that the most significant moments are often those where we choose to remain perfectly, beautifully still. How do you find your own stillness in a world that never stops moving?


