|
Finally
the elusive Naqsh is visible in all his glory. The mystery and mastery
that embody the creative endeavours of this enigmatic artist are
now open for public viewing. The Jamil Naqsh Retrospective at the
Mohatta Palace Museum encapsulates an aesthetic odyssey spanning
five long decades. Set out sequentially, this show traces the artist's
oeuvre from its very early years to date. By the end of the '60s
Naqsh had ceased to paint for exhibitions. Well-established and
highly regarded by then, his work was much sought after, especially
by collectors. The bulk of his creations were now available to a
private clientele only, with sporadic showings of some paintings
at prestigious fund-raisers, or as national exhibits. A near hermetic
existence further deepened the mystery surrounding his persona and
added premium to the already inaccessible works.
In
1999 the Jamil Naqsh Foundation, established to preserve his work,
brought some of the artist's art centrestage once again. However,
the work of the intervening decades was lost to the public. The
Mohatta Retrospective tries to fill this vacuum to some extent.
They have on loan, paintings from as many as 50 private collections
as well as the Naqsh Foundation. On view is a cache of 600 artworks,
some of which have never been exhibited publicly before. This temporary
transfer of private holdings to a public sphere endows the retro
show with a "must see" status. Such a thematically and
chronologically arranged collection is a rare event, not likely
to recur for quite some time to come. This planned and deliberated
event owes much to the mature aesthetic vision, foresight and consistent
efforts of curators Marjorie Hussain and Nasreen Askari.
Jamil Naqsh, the artist, belongs to the old cadre of painters
whose expression evolved from the ustad-shagird relationship. As
a student at Mayo School of Art, Lahore, in the early '50s Naqsh
got his first whiff of modernism when pioneer modernist Shakir Ali
was introducing his concepts of cubism. Simultaneously, miniature
art, under the guidance of the renowned Haji Shariff, was also an
essential part of the school curriculum. Keeping in mind the traditional
and literary ambience of Kairana, the artist's childhood home in
India, Naqsh's love for the classical and oriental in arts was a
very natural preference. Abandoning his study courses at Mayo he
commenced a two-year apprenticeship with Ustad Shariff. Imbibing
the skills of this arduous discipline had significant, far-reaching
effects on his development as an artist. All his subsequent innovative
phases are directly or indirectly related to some element of this
finely wrought exercise.
Pigeons
were the first pictorial motif borrowed from the miniature picture
frame. They were also among Naqsh's earliest companions from his
childhood days in Kairana, where pigeons roosted in the courtyards
and flew freely through open windows. And then their universal significance
as heralders of peace and harmony in the aesthetic vocabulary was
already there. In the early '60s, when his celebrated pigeons first
emerged on canvas, a leitmotif was born and with it came the flutter
of recognition, popularity and success. The birds swooped, cooed
and nuzzled their way into his compositions, and were imparted in
the process an aura of romance, lyricism and harmony. For years
to come they were emblems of the Naqsh mystique, his most faithful
friends in his affaire de coeur. He painted them in flight and at
rest, in watercolours, oils, ink and wash. At Mohatta, Galleries
1 to 4 have the most attractive specimens of these endearing creatures
in crude impasto and finely chiselled brushwork. An entire wall
in Gallery II, dedicated to over two dozen takes of a single pigeon,
reveal a master's obsession not just with the subject but also with
the painterly process. Like a conjuror, Naqsh is able to bring infinite
variation in colour and presentation, to a single object.
If pigeons were Naqsh's supporting cast, then surely it was
the female nude who was his leading lady, his muse, his object of
desire. In the early years, she was long-limbed, sharp-clawed, flat-chested
and grim-faced. Some frightening specimens hung in this show help
to trace his gradual development towards the evocative and the ethereal.
Still mute with sad soulful eyes, the nude gradually acquired tender,
soft, misty contours exuding an intensely sensuous aura. A woman
in love was painted by an artist in love with love. Searching for
a stronger metaphor than just the poetic sensitivity of woman and
pigeon, Naqsh evolved the 'Woman and Horse' series. Rejecting Asian
and subcontinental configurations, he took inspiration from the
bold modern language of sculptor Marino Marini's imagery. Without
lifting any elements from Marini's oeuvre, he worked out original
compositions charged with fusion, harmony and wholeness. The horse
was now his symbolic emblem of the male presence which encompassed,
enslaved and accompanied the nude in a variety of mannerisms. He
probably executed some of his most erotic pieces during this period.
Very graphic, some works from 'Woman, Prajna and Paramita: An Ode
to Love' series are under lock and key at Mohatta and can be viewed
by appointment only. Clasped lovingly, locked in embrace or just
together, Naqsh enacts a biological bonding of another nature in
his 'Mother and Child' series, by juxtaposing nudes with newborns.
Another emblem, another face of love and yet some more experiments
in modern expression. This series dedicated to his friend Dr. Sethna
is yet another example of his constant quest to explore new spatial
and emotional dimensions.
Shifting focus to the purely grammatical, Naqsh's 'Manuscript'
series stands out as a bold technical experiment with the Arabic
script. Not just content with modernising it as most contemporary
calligraphers have done, he reinvents the idiom entirely, forsaking
legibility to create his own complex interplay of signs and symbols.
Naqsh's love for the materiality of paint and his romance
with the painted surface is as crucial to his oeuvre as his emotive
sensibility. Textural manipulation, from the abrasive, grainy and
heavily sedimented to the delicately packed and pointillated, has
not only given strong stylistic definition to his work but has also
been instrumental in expressing his various moods and phases. Pearly,
marbelised surfaces contrast sharply with heavily-worked layered
pigmentation, and the finely speckled surfaces instantly remind
one of the single hair brush used in miniature painting. Add to
all this a very mature sensitive feel for colour and we have a master
on our hands - one who is not afraid to experiment, grow and regenerate
in his quest for the eternal.
|