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- Chintan Upadhyay
- Prabhakar Barwe
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- Prakash Waghmare
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Wednesday, 10 May 2017
Tuesday, 25 April 2017
Art from Pakistan : Revival of the fittest - Quddus Mirza
Hamid Ali Hanbhi: The Colours Of Paradise-2 |
What next? This short phrase becomes a long, unbearable sentence for
the recent graduates of visual arts. Four years spent at an art
institution provide a sense of security, satisfaction and
self-confidence that fades as soon as the students leave their alma
mater.
The world beyond art schools or the real world is different,
difficult. Dealing with galleries, buyers, critics and hoping for
curators’ attention are arduous but necessary tasks in order to make a
name within the art circles. Many disappear with the dust of time, and a
few manage to make their mark. Politeness, connections and
school-of-thought matter but, more than that, it is the newness,
originality and excellence of an artwork that ensures their future
survival.
We are witnessing that stage in the lives of some artists, especially
in the group show ‘Beyond Today’ that included Ahsan Javaid, Ehsan
Memon, Hamid Ali Hanbhi, Syed Hussain, Unab Sumble and Usman Khalid. The
exhibition held from March 31-April 14, 2017 at O Art Space, Lahore
offered something important than art: a drive and desire beyond the
protective membrane of an art institute. The fact that these artists who
graduated from the NCA and the Punjab University not long ago have been
working regularly, and exhibiting frequently is appreciated, but it is
their attempt to expand their visual vocabulary and formal concerns that
is more crucial and significant.
Ahsan Javaid: General Rule. |
Actually for a recent art graduate, the real challenge is to maintain
a balance between his identity formulated in his graduate work and the
need to produce something new. Somehow, the artists in ‘Beyond Today’
found interesting solutions.
Hamid Ali Hanbhi astonished the viewers last year due to his remarkable skill in rendering stills from movies with English subtitles along with a conceptual sophistication through joining two visuals to make a single narrative. In the present exhibition, he kept his craft and observation intact and moved away from his previous imagery. Here a large canvas is composed of (Afghan) burka-clad figures in varying hues, which also remind of Chinese artist Fang Li-jun, who paints identical faces with smiles that verge to grimace. (His, and several other Chinese artists’ choice of making identical features could relate to the way outside world perceives all Chinese people as uniform, as well as the boom of Chinese industry that has spread cheap and affordable ‘similar’ products across the globe).
In the context of our situation, a woman in a burka that completely conceals her identity is like someone without any features. So Hanbhi’s canvas with burka heads of same size, yet in varying shades alludes to how the real personality and character of a female is jeopardised once hidden underneath that attire. The shift of colours suggests the way society or male eye views the change when it comes to women is merely cosmetic and superficial.
This issue of diffused identity is also addressed in the work of Syed
Hussain, a painter trained in the discipline of miniature (2015) and
belongs to the Hazara community from Quetta. In one work, the
meticulously rendered drawing of three figures — looking like a black
and white photograph — the central character is blank. Likewise, in two
other small works, one sees yellow surfaces with portrait of two
individuals. Each resembling some kind of picture identity card (even
though the execution reinforced that it is a ‘drawing’), since these
have official stamps, letterings in Chinese and Hindi, and a number of
signatures, all alluding to the remains of those who were lost due to
natural causes or for political reasons. In fact the issue of
‘disappearing’ is different for a member of the Hazara Shiite community
who if not kidnapped has to shield his face, since the features betray
his sect, hence making him an easy target. Religious sects out to exterminate each other is an aftermath of General Zia’s military dictatorship that perpetuated religious differences within the Muslim population of Pakistan. Ahsan Javed in his painting composed the folded posters of General Zia, so one is able to discern the outline of his face and traces of his army uniform. The work serves to connect the present with the past, but more importantly it added a major point in the artist’s imagery. Javed painted folded drapes of different draperies including those with scared texts and for sale outside of shrines (2016) but in his recent work, using the same strategy, he points to the essence/cause of culture instead of its mere outcome.
Another artist, a former class fellow of Javed and Hanbhi, Ehsan Memon made a dark shape of a roti along with a composite image of multiple sections of a naan completed in black and grey. Only if a person still remembers his immaculately fabricated breads, he would be able to connect current works on paper to his past pieces, but failing that, these appear more like exercises in tonal separation.
Probably the problem lies with the artist’s association rather bondage with his pictorial matter. During his degree show (2016) Javed was replicating reality into art in such a way that one was unable to distinguish between the two. A formal concern in the art of 1960s but in our local circumstances the choice of continuing as artist or opting for another profession is as crucial as the academic debates about the distinction between art and life.
However, in the current exhibition that frame of reference (previously seen in his cardboard box, bars of wood, collection of coal) is lost because now it is the outcome — the roti which assumes the main point of interest — more being a decorative device than a deeper concern to reflect upon reality.
Often our conceptual concerns are deep inside us, like our veins and arteries, without us being aware of them, yet performing their tasks. The work of Unab Sumble indicates the scheme in which an artist blends diverse pictorial expressions for concocting a narrative about one’s existence. Normally an artist adopts one peculiar language and continues expounding in it, but it is rare that he or she inculcates multiple modes of descriptions into one work in order to formulate a narrative that depicts our situation and state.
Sumble combines naturalistic depiction with selective application of patches of colour to create visuals which affirm that what an artist is making is not a replication of his immediate optic response, but his idea of reality with its varying dimensions — initiating from personal observation to art history.
Hamid Ali Hanbhi astonished the viewers last year due to his remarkable skill in rendering stills from movies with English subtitles along with a conceptual sophistication through joining two visuals to make a single narrative. In the present exhibition, he kept his craft and observation intact and moved away from his previous imagery. Here a large canvas is composed of (Afghan) burka-clad figures in varying hues, which also remind of Chinese artist Fang Li-jun, who paints identical faces with smiles that verge to grimace. (His, and several other Chinese artists’ choice of making identical features could relate to the way outside world perceives all Chinese people as uniform, as well as the boom of Chinese industry that has spread cheap and affordable ‘similar’ products across the globe).
In the context of our situation, a woman in a burka that completely conceals her identity is like someone without any features. So Hanbhi’s canvas with burka heads of same size, yet in varying shades alludes to how the real personality and character of a female is jeopardised once hidden underneath that attire. The shift of colours suggests the way society or male eye views the change when it comes to women is merely cosmetic and superficial.
Unab Sumble: Profound Reflection-2. |
Ehsan Memon: Girah-1. |
Another artist, a former class fellow of Javed and Hanbhi, Ehsan Memon made a dark shape of a roti along with a composite image of multiple sections of a naan completed in black and grey. Only if a person still remembers his immaculately fabricated breads, he would be able to connect current works on paper to his past pieces, but failing that, these appear more like exercises in tonal separation.
Probably the problem lies with the artist’s association rather bondage with his pictorial matter. During his degree show (2016) Javed was replicating reality into art in such a way that one was unable to distinguish between the two. A formal concern in the art of 1960s but in our local circumstances the choice of continuing as artist or opting for another profession is as crucial as the academic debates about the distinction between art and life.
However, in the current exhibition that frame of reference (previously seen in his cardboard box, bars of wood, collection of coal) is lost because now it is the outcome — the roti which assumes the main point of interest — more being a decorative device than a deeper concern to reflect upon reality.
Often our conceptual concerns are deep inside us, like our veins and arteries, without us being aware of them, yet performing their tasks. The work of Unab Sumble indicates the scheme in which an artist blends diverse pictorial expressions for concocting a narrative about one’s existence. Normally an artist adopts one peculiar language and continues expounding in it, but it is rare that he or she inculcates multiple modes of descriptions into one work in order to formulate a narrative that depicts our situation and state.
Sumble combines naturalistic depiction with selective application of patches of colour to create visuals which affirm that what an artist is making is not a replication of his immediate optic response, but his idea of reality with its varying dimensions — initiating from personal observation to art history.
Friday, 17 March 2017
Thursday, 16 March 2017
PIN POSTER : Jehangir Nicholson Gallery, CSMVS
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