Saturday, 4 April 2026

A Country Becomes Beautiful When Its People Begin to See

 

We live amidst extraordinary landscapes—temple streets layered with history, villages that wake to mist and birdsong, coastlines that shift colour by the hour. And yet, our everyday surroundings often feel neglected. A wall peels and remains unattended. A street gathers clutter until it fades into the background of daily life. Public spaces slowly become no one’s responsibility. We pass through them without really looking.

This is not only a failure of governance. It is a failure of attention.

No policy can beautify a country whose people do not feel beauty in their surroundings. Cleanliness drives can remove dirt; regulations can impose order. But they cannot create the quiet desire to make a place aesthetically alive. That desire emerges only when people begin to see their environment differently—not as a backdrop, but as something worth caring for.

History suggests that such a shift often begins with artists.

In nineteenth-century France, painters like Claude Monet, Vincent van Gogh, and Paul Cézanne left the city and turned their attention to villages and countryside. They painted fields, cottages, rivers, and narrow streets—ordinary places, rendered with extraordinary attention to light and colour.

Houses on a Hill (Groupe de maisons sur un coteau)

Houses on the Hill by Pierre-Auguste Renoir

 

What changed was not the landscape, but perception. The everyday acquired dignity. Villages became objects of admiration. Over time, these images entered public imagination, and places like Provence and Arles came to be seen not just as locations, but as aesthetic identities.

Art did not merely depict beauty. It taught people how to notice it.

A similar sensibility took shape in Japan. Artists such as Hiroshige Ando captured fleeting scenes—a road in the rain, a bridge at dusk, travellers in passing moments. There was no spectacle, only attention to the transient and the ordinary.

This way of seeing did not remain within art. It entered life itself—into how spaces were arranged, how streets were maintained, how small details were treated with care. Over time, it produced an environment where even the simplest settings appear intentional and serene.

Japan’s aesthetic refinement did not arise by accident. It emerged because people learned, gradually, to see.

image_hiroshige_close

Cherry Blossoms under the Full Moon by Utagawa Hiroshige

 

In the United Kingdom, this relationship between art and environment has evolved into public participation. The landscape tradition shaped by artists like J. M. W. Turner and John Constable continues today through competitions and programs that bring artists into real settings. People watch, engage, and begin to look more closely at landscapes they might otherwise ignore.

John Constable | Flatford Mill (between 1810 and 1811) | Artsy

Flatford mill, John Constable

 

Beauty becomes not distant, but shared.

India has already shown, through initiatives like Swachh Bharat Mission, that collective behavior can change. But cleanliness is only a beginning. A place can be clean and still feel lifeless. The deeper challenge is to move from cleanliness to care, from compliance to pride.

That transition cannot be enforced. It must be felt.

What might such a shift look like? It could begin with artists turning their attention to the lived environments of India—streets, neighborhoods, villages, small towns. Painters, photographers, and students could treat these spaces not as problems to be fixed, but as subjects worthy of attention.

When a place is painted, it changes—not physically, but perceptually. A familiar street, seen through an artist’s eye, reveals patterns and relationships that were previously overlooked. Those who live there begin to see it differently.

And that difference matters.

A shopkeeper who sees his street as something that can be beautiful may think twice before adding to its clutter. A resident who sees her locality represented with care may feel pride. A child who sketches her surroundings begins to notice details others miss, forming a relationship with her environment that is attentive and responsible.

Such changes are small, but they accumulate. They influence behavior. They shape expectations. Over time, they create a culture in which beauty is not exceptional, but normal.

Institutions can support this shift—through competitions, exhibitions, and platforms that celebrate local environments. Schools can encourage students to observe and represent their surroundings. Media can highlight places for their aesthetic potential, not only their problems. But these are enablers. The transformation itself is personal.

It lies in how we look.

Do we move through our surroundings without seeing them? Do we accept visual disorder as inevitable? Or do we pause, even briefly, to notice light, colour, and form?

A country becomes beautiful when its people begin to feel that their environment is not neutral. It reflects what we value.

This awareness cannot be imposed from above. It must be cultivated through repeated acts of attention.

The beginning is modest. An artist paints a street. A student sketches a corner. A community takes pride in its surroundings. These acts may seem small, but they reshape perception. And when perception changes, behavior follows.

India does not need to discover beauty. It is already present. What we need is to recover our ability to see it—and, having seen it, to care.

Perhaps the first step is not to clean a street, though that is necessary. It is to look at it, quietly and attentively, as if it were worth painting.

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