At the Vaidehi Utsav exhibition, on view at the Civil Services Officers Institute in New Delhi, Mithila art’s bold, meticulous lines lend shape to a figure who has long been flattened by scripture and state alike. Organised by the Madhubani Literary Festival and curated by Savita Jha, the exhibition sets out to reimagine Sita—not as the obedient consort of Ram, but as a figure of agency, discernment, and philosophical depth. Across the works, she appears in multiple incarnations: wife, yogini, spectral form, and silent witness. In one painting, she has no mouth. In another, she meditates alone in exile. Invoking a vocabulary of sacrifice and silence that often feels less like subversion and more like surrender.