Chhatrapati Dutta’s installation is located at the intersection of history and memory, leaving the scars of Partition raw and visible. This is not simply a work about the Partition of Bengal; it is about the cyclical nature of trauma - how lines, once drawn, are never erased but instead multiply, intersecting with new borders, ideologies, and identities. Partition is a word heavy with consequence, a wound inflicted by colonialism but compounded by the actions of those who inherited its borders. In Bengal, the divisions of 1905 and 1947 sliced communities along religious lines as if identity could be cleanly severed. But these lines were never clean. They intersected lives and landscapes, splitting families, memories, and the very fabric of belonging. Dutta’s work confronts this violence, this fragmentation of the self, and asks a haunting question: How do we reconcile with a history that refuses to remain in the past, one that intersects with our present and shapes who we are and what we might become?