Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Entertainment Arts+Culture

Art and Culture: Exploring a Pakistani palette

‘The Tapestry of Fading Gardens’ weaves together works by 16 artists



Salima Hashmi, The Dark Weight of Night series I, 2020, Mixed media on archival paper
Image Credit:

The spring exhibition at 1x1 gallery, ‘The Tapestry of Fading Gardens’, weaves together works by 16 Pakistani artists based in major art centres such as Lahore, Karachi and Quetta as well as more remote areas to present a rich tapestry of contemporary art across the country.

Salima Hashmi, The Dark Weight of Night series II, 2020, Mixed media on archival paper
Image Credit:

Established and emerging artists participating in the show include Adeela Suleman, Affan Baghpati, Ali Kazim, Farrukh Adnan, Ghulam Mohammad, Huma Iftikhar, Maheen Ausaf, Muzzumil Ruheel, Saba Qizilbash, Salima Hashmi, Sarah Ahmad, Shah Abdullah Alamee, Shakila Haider, Sheraz Faisal, Wardha Shabbir and Yasir Waqas.

Saba Qizilbash, Grand Trunk Rd Pt II - Torkham to Lahore, 2020, Graphite on paper
Image Credit:

The most striking work in the show, ‘When You Had Enough of Paradise!’, by Suleman, is a latticed steel curtain hanging down from the ceiling all the way to the floor. The repetitive pattern on the curtain is formed by figures of birds, some upright and some upside down, cut into the steel.

Advertisement

“The memory of violence is embedded not only in people’s bodies and minds but also on the landscape in the form of war memorials or monuments. The more heinous the crime the more beautiful the monument.

Yasir Waqas, Scrapped together a small square of dust, 2020Gouache, silver and gold leaves on 14 layers of Wasli (hand made paper)
Image Credit:

“In the same way I camouflage violence with beauty. This monument-like structure is a symbol of pain and deaths caused by war, bombings, unlawful killings and fake encounters by police. Birds represent freedom, sacrifice, resurrection, the soul or death in different cultures and mythologies, so I have dedicated a sparrow, the most common bird in Karachi to each death. The birds make a pattern that repeats itself infinitely reflecting the endless violence around us,” says Suleman.

Affan Baghpati, Flower, 2019, Assemblage, Brass, polymer fiber
Image Credit:

Baghpati has also used metal, but his work is playful. The artist collects discarded domestic objects and decorative items and transforms them into hybrid sculptures such as a copper kettle with animal horns, or a vinyl dog with a brass decorative piece for a head.

Advertisement

By giving a new life to these discarded, often obsolete objects, he brings memories of the past and diverse cultural histories into a contemporary context.

Ausaf’s medium of choice is textile. She uses the traditional technique of weaving on a hand loom to create contemporary interpretations of artisanal designs. Haider also uses weaving to create colourful artworks from strips of handmade wasli paper.

Affan Baghpati, Trapped in a vessel, 2019, Assemblage, copper and Taxidermy horns
Image Credit:

Waqas uses wasli paper in a different way to create eye-catching works that look like mechanical devices but appear fragile and draw viewers into deep mysterious portals in the centre. The artist has always been fascinated with the mechanics of aeroplanes and the details of engines and was inspired to draw them during his childhood.

He went on to become a pilot and aircraft mechanic to fulfil the expectations of others but felt limited and constrained by this profession. His intriguing sculptures created from silver and gold leaf and 14 layers of wasli paper covered with a mix of mechanical and arabesque drawings express this internal conflict between the artist and the mechanic in him and symbolise the inner struggles we all deal with.

Advertisement
Tapestries-of-Fading-Gardens_installation
Image Credit:

“Doing something I was not really sure about created conflict, confusion and a clash of ideas in my mind. I wanted to escape but was not able to fully shun what had been planted in my mind. My work is about compromises and conflicts within a personality, between idea innate and idea implanted, and the damage to the personality and the idea itself,” Waqas says.

Adeela Suleman, When you had enough of Paradise!, 2020, SS - Stainless Steel sheet
Image Credit:

Qizilbash focuses on conflicts related to land. She attempts to connect divided or disputed territories through her amazingly detailed drawings depicting border areas, boundary walls, broken fences, gates, abandoned railway tracks and other in-between spaces.

Sheraz Faisal, Layer upon dark layer, 21K yellow gold plated fired copper bullet shells, hand carved green glass, gold gilding on rot-iron
Image Credit:
Advertisement

She also constructs imaginary, labyrinthine yet walkable pathways that bring together cities that were once linked by trade, culture and geography. On the other hand, Ahmad explores universal identity and the human condition that transcends borders through a series of ink drawings titled, Fractured Cosmos featuring web-like patterns that are common to the human body, nature and the cosmos.

Yasir Waqas, There seem to be no hour of day light, 2020, Gouache, silver and gold leaves on 14 layers of wasli (hand made paper)
Image Credit:

Alamee’s calligraphic works are inspired by the ancient Persian siyah mashq style and the timeless verses of great Eastern poets such as Rumi, Faiz, Ghalib and Khusro; whereas Ruheel has used calligraphy to depict the pauses between words and unspoken thoughts and emotions.

Don’t miss it!

A 3D virtual tour of this exhibition in 1x1 gallery is available at alserkal.online

Shakila Haider, The echoed pattern, 2020, Gouche on wasli paper, laser scoring and weaving,

1 of 1

Advertisement