The works in ‘Resemble
Reassemble’ an exhibition of Pakistani Artists at Devi Art Foundation Gurgaon, present
facets of life peculiar to Pakistan. While the art works are indicative of
global influences in terms of the media and a visual language that is used
world-wide, the artists do not engage with global issues, being more involved
with those of immediate concern. This allows us a unique opportunity to reflect
on parallel concerns prevalent here too, at less obvious levels perhaps, but
existing nonetheless for centuries of a shared history cannot be wiped out in
mere 60 odd years of partition. We in India are culturally linked to Pakistan
in ways that would be impossible to dismiss, yet the art also reflects an ethos
that sets us apart and viewing this show was an informative and touching
experience.
Bani Abidi - Security Barriers |
Representing primarily the first decade of this century, from 2000 to 2009 through works of artists born after 1970, most being in their late 20’s or early 30’s, the dialogue focuses on the implications of purdah, relations between men and women in Pakistan, ties with India, gender and other such issues. Though young, some works display considerable intellectual maturity while others are yet gauche in perception and execution. Some are a direct manifestation of the experience as opposed to brilliantly creative ones, but the disarming honesty and simple intellectualization of ideas presented was refreshing. The catalogue makes frequent references to the political upheavals in
Imraan Mudassar - Aerobatics |
Weapons play a major role in the
work of Imran Khan. In his suspended installation, ‘Implode 1’ parts of a rifle are placed in
front of surgical instruments, making an uncanny connection between the fact
that both penetrate the body, one to hurt and the other to heal. In a black and
white print ‘Aerobatics’ Imran Mudassar draws a lattice of fighter planes and
through the spaces between the conjoined parts, we can see what the city would
look like if under siege. He suggests that death could come via terror attacks
from the sky. The juxtaposed pattern of airplanes over the entire city scape asserts
the disturbing and unsettling fact that you could be anywhere, praying inside a
mosque or ambling through the market place and it would not make a difference. In
the screen prints by Nazia H Khan, ‘Organza’ and ‘Hair’, lines and marks that
denote folds of the organza fabric and the imprint of flowing hair evoke a
tension, which I assumed as emanating from terrorism because of the context
they were placed in, but the same lines of tension could be evocative of what
we face in everyday situations, outside Pakistan.
Some other artists have spoken of more universal human issues too, such as the essential futility of life that we all may experience as in the video by Ferwa Ibrahim – ‘I Didn’t’ Plan to Drown, the Nixes pulled me in’, where, in her struggle to contain the spill, she ends up spreading it farther and farther, becoming totally embroiled in a situation she had not counted upon occurring. In another video which is untitled, she keeps trying to draw her own shadow which is beautifully evocative of the fact that life is ever-
Nazia Khan - Organza |
Some other artists have spoken of more universal human issues too, such as the essential futility of life that we all may experience as in the video by Ferwa Ibrahim – ‘I Didn’t’ Plan to Drown, the Nixes pulled me in’, where, in her struggle to contain the spill, she ends up spreading it farther and farther, becoming totally embroiled in a situation she had not counted upon occurring. In another video which is untitled, she keeps trying to draw her own shadow which is beautifully evocative of the fact that life is ever-
changing and so are we, and as the light falls and ebbs, so
does our sense of self. In Huria Khan’s untitled video, the written word
undergoes transformation as pages of writing become a boat which is then
immersed in water and the once clear water becomes darkened with the black ink
and the paper loses its content. She thus makes a rather subtle but poignant
comment on the whole notion of being and non-being, of transformation from one
to the other.
Ferwa Ibrahim - video stills -'Untitled' |
Unum Babar too attempts to
address a spiritual idea in ‘Then Both of us were Born Anew’, referring to two
births, when light first strikes and a new awakened sense emerges and when two
souls unite and are renewed through love, but I was drawn more to the heavily
clad woman and inferred a gender reference rather than the spiritual, as
referred to in the poem by William Cartwright [17th century] whom
she quotes in the title. Her two other videos ‘Laminar Turbulence’ and ‘Wherein
all Plunges and Perished’ were projected together, bringing forth the extreme
stillness of time as water drops and ripples in a blocked bathroom sink in a
slow and almost agonizing way, amplifying the torment of a woman trapped inside
the drain of a bathroom sink, projected through the pedestal of a wash basin.
The carefully measured precision reflects the artist’s honest sensitivity to
herself and her situation as a woman in Pakistan , where she is not just
subjugated by dictatorial regimes and terror but also as a woman where the do’s
and don’ts are extensive. The scale of projection is miniscule, effectively revealing
that size is irrelevant when making a point that is deeply felt and well examined.
Aisha Khalid - Gul-e-Haan |
There were a number of works
dealing with gender issues. Aisha Khalid uses dizzy designs of very intricate
patters painted with superb craftsmanship in the tradition of miniature
paintings but her handling is contemporary. In ‘Gul-e-Haan’ the pattern of the
veil occupies the full page without any physical representation of the woman. She
thus speaks of the implications of purdah, where in excluding the woman the
artist signifies that women have virtually been reduced to being a piece of patterned
cloth. Hamra Abbas in ‘Please do not Touch,
Stay Out and Enjoy the Show’ speaks of woman and her home as being a kind of
showpiece, not to be touched. She uses the English script on the ‘jaali’ which
is an easily recognized form of Islamic architecture used in India too. A brightly
coloured self-portrait is framed and neatly hung within the contours of a house
such that a child would draw, but defined through an intricate jaali which
overlaps the portrait, thus also denoting her imprisonment within the home. She
uses the Islamic ideal of the ‘jaali’ signifying the veil between God and us,
to speak of seclusion and exclusion in a temporal sense. While the idea
resonates on an emotional and intellectual plane, it falls short at the level
of execution where greater finesse was required, especially in the making of
the paper jaali which comes unglued at various points.
By Contrast Bani Abidi’s digital prints of ‘Security barriers A-L’, has clarity in thought and articulation and is presented with minimal fuss. She uses icons that are universal security barriers, but by contextualizing them within specified locations occupied by the international community inPakistan ,
she makes her comment about the kind of scrutiny that people undergo on a daily
basis. This however is not specific to Pakistan alone, but a universal
phenomenon which a preoccupation with terror has inflicted upon the whole
world. Abidi’s videos bring into play
parallels and dissimilarities between India
and Pakistan
both culturally and politically. In ‘The News’ she uses the double channel format to project the
news being read in India and Pakistan simultaneously wherein the subtitles
inform of the difference in how each interprets the same situation. ‘Shan Pipe
Band Learns the Star and Spangled Banner’, is a layered commentary on the
relationship between Pakistan
and America , where
traditional Bandwallas, a colonial inheritance such that is still part and
parcel of life in India
too, are learning the American anthem possibly to please some visiting
dignitary. They could have been Bandwallas from Chandni Chowk or anywhere in India and it is
difficult to really see the difference.
Bani Abidi. Security Barrier Type G, Traffic Police, Karachi |
By Contrast Bani Abidi’s digital prints of ‘Security barriers A-L’, has clarity in thought and articulation and is presented with minimal fuss. She uses icons that are universal security barriers, but by contextualizing them within specified locations occupied by the international community in
Bani Abidi - Shaan Pipe Band, video stills |
The artistic dialogue may well
appear insular and the works not highly intellectual in content and while this
may be true because most artists are young and haven’t developed their full
potential, it was their honest interrogation of ideas and situations that
appealed. In Delhi
we see a lot of ideas that have their rooting in the mind and often become
obscure because of this and I think the most interesting revelation of this exhibition
was that when threat sits at your door-step daily, there really is very little
scope for elaborate thought. Then honesty of how you ‘feel’ is the only way to
tackle any situation, where the vulnerability of being connected to this is the
way forward, towards an expression of it.