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Since
9/11, Muslim militancy has hogged the headlines. This phenomenon
has provoked a global interest in the relationship of identity,
faith, and violence, with a particular focus on Islam. Books such
as Identity and Violence by Nobel Laureate, Amartya Sen, and art
exhibitions like "Without Boundary: Seventeen Ways of Looking"
- a survey of the works of a number of contemporary artists who
hail from the Islamic world - held this spring at the Museum of
Modern Art (MoMA) New York, are recent examples of the various forms
of intellectual engagement that this enquiry is taking.
In
his book, Sen pleads with his readers to acknowledge and embrace
the plurality of our identities: "the same person can be, without
any contradiction, an American citizen, of Caribbean origin, a Christian,
a liberal, a woman, a vegetarian, a long-distance runner, a historian,
a feminist, a heterosexual." Sen's prescription for peaceful
co-existence is to avoid, what he calls, the "solitarist"
approach, 'under which people are neatly, but very wrongly, partitioned
into Western or Eastern, Muslim or Christian or Hutu and Tutsi,
or even being Pro-Globalization and Anti-Globalization - with no
space for the assumption and exercise of other identities.'
Fereshteh
Daftari, who curated the MoMa exhibition, addresses the ambiguity
of identity in art in the very title of her introduction to the
catalogue of the exhibition: "Islamic or Not." She argues
against the reductive simplification implied in such kinds of categorisation.
Prominent in the MoMA show were eight works of Pakistani-born
Shahzia Sikander, trained in Mughul miniature painting at the National
College of Arts, Lahore. Influenced by Sigmar Polke, 'layering paint
and narrative' in her miniatures has been Shahzia's forte. The contemporary
narrative of post 9/11 politics informs her composition 'Web': fighter
planes caught in a spider's web in some oil-rigged corner of the
globe is juxtaposed with the traditional hunting motifs of a lion
devouring a deer, and a leopard threatening the peace of a paradisiacal
garden of flowering shrubs, gazelles and birds. This is quintessentially
21st century miniature painting.
Shahzia is one of a small group of artists, including Nilima
Sheikh from India, who engage in developing an active relationship
with the forms that refer to earlier visual traditions of the subcontinent.
Yet, Shahzia's treatment of traditional motifs in her miniatures
is neither nostalgic nor revivalist.
Not in the way it was for the father of modern Pakistani
art, Abdur Rahman Chughtai. Chughtai's artistic heritage dated back
to the Bengal School pioneered by Abanindranath Thakur, a nephew
of Robindronath Thakur. Samarendranath Gupta, a student of Abanindranath,
had brought the style from Kolkata to Lahore when he became the
principal of the Mayo School of Art - now the NCA. Chughtai, a student
at Mayo School, was initiated into the Bengal watercolor techniques;
he mastered the method and integrated it into his distinctive style.
The year 1906 was the turning point: Chughtai rejected the
Bengal School and turned to Mughul miniatures. Chughtai had visited
the Bengal School in 1905 after the Partition of the state into
East and West Bengal; he had witnessed the heightened divisiveness
between the Hindu and Muslim communities of Bengal. In 1906 the
Muslim League was founded to represent the political demands of
Muslim Indians, and the poet Muhammad Iqbal proposed the creation
of the separate Muslim state of Pakistan. Chughtai decided to commit
himself to a revival of Mughal aesthetics. The issue became one
of forging a Muslim identity in his works. He veered away from the
Bengal School as India began to crack along communal lines, culminating
in the 1947 Partition that split Punjab and Bengal, with Lahore
falling within the nascent Muslim country, Pakistan and Kolkata
in the predominantly Hindu India.
Ironically, the Bengal School of Art itself was a product
of a crisis in identity: it was born at the turn of the 20th century
primarily as a reaction to the British imperial imposition of Western
values on Indian art. It nucleated at the Society of Oriental Art,
and in Jorashanko, the residence of the talented Thakur family in
Kolkata. As an indigenous solution to issues of identity and self-representation,
the Bengal School sought to expose and displace the colonialist's
art and substitute its own mission of self-expression and national
regeneration.
Abanindranath, who had received training in the European
Academic style of painting from Olinto Gilhardi and Charles Palmer,
sought to remain true to Indian traditions, experience and sensibility,
while making use of European conventions. The principal aspiration
of the Bengal School painters was to reinstate the numinous, mystical
image at the heart of Indian art that had been under-valued under
the British naturalist art education.
Abanindranath was inspired by Far-eastern art, specifically
Japanese watercolours. The emotively nuanced 'wash' technique he
evolved from observing Japanese artist Yokoyama Taikan became, in
time, the chief trademark of the 'Abanindranath style' of Indian
painting. Though he experimented in many forms, Abanindranath's
most obvious debt was to Mughal paintings. Under his brush the Mughal
miniature-style paintings became highly emotive, capturing an intensity,
exemplified in his famous study, 'The Passing of Shah Jahan'.
Befriended by E. B. Havell, Superintendent of the Calcutta
Art School, Abanindranath secured official patronage and furthered
the nationalist cause by influencing the curricula of the government
schools of art. The neo-Bengal art was a synthesis of Ajanta fresco,
Mughal/Pahari/Rajput miniature, European naturalism, and Japanese
wash techniques. By the 1920s, the Bengal School had established
its 'self-conscious role of a movement which restored to Indian
art, its independence and lost identity.'
Despite the Bengal School's success in forging a new 'Indian'
art, the tension between the revivalist recovery of past Indian
art traditions and the progressive openness to new developments
in global art, soon splintered the Bengal School. Nandalal Bose
adopted the Japanese minimalist style to depict the lives of ordinary
villagers. Jamini Roy, a primitivist, infused new life into the
dying tradition of patua folk art. While Gaganendronath Thakur went
on to experiment with Cubism, Robindronath Thakur bent towards an
inward-looking expressionism.
Post 9/11, identity politics has reared its hydra head, fomenting
an 'us' versus 'them' cultural war. Culture can be defined as a
system of human practices that constitute society; it involves interconnected
spheres of activity- a web of social interactions encompassing economics,
politics, morals, religion, art, and language. Our culture is our
primary sense of identity defining who we are. Post-independence,
many artists have travelled and trained outside the subcontinent,
and some have emigrated to new lands. So our culture is increasingly
acquiring a global character. Consequently, the discourse on contemporary
South Asian art oscillates between multiple dichotomies, such as
that of past and present, tradition and modernity, religious and
secular, sub-urban and metropolitan. The South Asian artist is challenged
to resolve these dichotomies, and to arrive at their own distinctive
viewpoint.
As the Pakistani and Indian diaspora grows, and as more South
Asian artists live and create art in their native locations and
their residences abroad, these dichotomies often tend towards a
syncretic solution. Artists begin to juxtapose diverse sources -
often playfully - displaying a global sensibility. So much so that
it is difficult to speak of a monolithic 'Indian' or 'Pakistani'
art form. An increasingly popular trend is to create harmonious
hybrids by bringing together signifiers from different cultures
(Hindu, Muslim, Christian) and time periods, Eastern and Western,
within the same artwork as exemplified in the modernist miniatures
created by Shahzia Sikander. Works such as Shahzia's, where images
of varied origins are represented on the same canvas (for example
when she uses a traditional Hindu image of the goddess Kali and
superimposes it onto a veiled Muslim female form), provoke the destabilisation
of fixed meanings. The foremost being that of fixed identity.
In addressing the fluidity of identity and embracing our
heterogeneous heritage, South Asian art has come a long way from
the nationalist, revivalist agendas of Abanindranath's Bengal School
or that of Chughtai in Lahore who searched for identity in pre-Colonial/pre-Partition
cultural roots. It is in the works of artists like Shahzia, that
one finds a rich transplant of traditions in a contemporary context.
Artists like her are striding many worlds and breaking out of narrow,
nationalist agendas; their works contemplate a global culture.
And herein lies hope for harmony.
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