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Once
it was the mature and the established who brought substance
to art. Today it is the young radicals who are invigorating
the scene. Thesis shows at art colleges are the new hunting
ground for fresh talent with young graduates getting more media
and buyer attention than ever before.
The
Indus Valley Degree Show, a well-attended yearly event, attracts
attention because of its progressive stance and a bold aesthetic
approach. This year’s batch of fine arts graduates was
larger than before and particularly noticeable was the keen
student interest shown for the age-old art of painting and drawing
which hitherto seemed to be fading from the Indus curriculum.
Most of the thesis concepts centred on exploration and location
of the self in an urban environment, with particular reference
to the political, social and cultural climate of the region.
Young
artist Sausan Saulat searched for identity in the many “Paradoxes
modern living presents us with.” Titled “Don’t
rain on my parade,” her works, daring and fun-loving as
they were, remained underscored with the endeavour to retain
one’s individuality while trying to grapple with the complex
business of living in a modern society. Sausan is proficient
in the art of drawing and painting and is able to make attractive
presentations. If she sharpens her concepts and brings them
at par with her technical expertise, she would most certainly
be an artist to watch out for.
Asim
Butt is another artist with potential. He paints with confidence
and his pronounced expression, deconstructing what he terms
“ideals of machismo and manhood received through myth
and history,” veers closely around his original concept.
Had he eliminated some of his rather bizarre works through a
stringent selective process, it would have added to the impact
of his otherwise strong repertoire. Butt is focused and gutsy
enough to engage with complex issues.
Artist
Ambreen Hameed, “treating bodies as cultural spaces”
and “trying to show moral and cultural depletion and loss
of self,” also creates imagery that translates her thoughts
directly. However, the ability to strike an equation between
the gross and the sophisticated and still retain the punch of
the original message, is a tricky balancing act.
Madiha
Hyder is another artist who resorts to unusual juxtapositions
to make her statement. She evokes the conflict of power struggle,
hegemony and territorial usurpation by building a contrast of
good and evil. Inverting the roles of harmless domestic pets
like cats, she posits them as violent perpetrators out to destroy
the innocents of this world, shown through images of lovable
toys. The artist, adept at painting, succeeds in unsettling
the viewer with her strange images even though her concepts
are not entirely resolved.
The sensitive issue of child labour is addressed with good effect
in Munazah Mehmood’s monochrome anatomy drawings/paintings
of hollow comb-like rib cages of young boys. She builds her
case by equating this emptiness with the bleak existence of
the ordinary comb-selling boys one encounters on the roadsides.
Aptly titled, “Has anyone seen my childhood,” the
works are stark and severe.
Nida
Aqeel’s mix-and-match paintings were spot on. She tried
to portray how two people of different mindsets come together
and make a relationship work. Marium Agha’s stitch-crafted
paintings and prayer beads installation centred on her experience
of Hajj. However, it was her technique rather than the concept
that was instantly noticed.
In
sculpture, unlike the thesis paintings, the narrative was not
quite as explicit or intentional. Young Sohail Abdullah’s
anchor piece, an electrically heated table, filled with sand
and dotted with varied forms of stones, offered viewers sensory
experiences that were completely unintellectual. The warm stones
had small balls inside them that could be turned and twisted,
listened to and played around with. These fun pieces offered
tactile experiences, where people could interact and engage
with themselves. A promising student with deft working skills,
Abdullah’s thesis repertoire unfortunately lacked centrality.
Caged forms by Quratalain Waheed were modifications of enclosed
spaces; her thesis dwelt on the abstruse nature of these spaces.
Zartaj Bano’s sculpture, a cluster of headless tree trunks,
addressed destruction of nature. Her simulation of tree bark
texture from ordinary tissue paper was very life-like.
Printmaker
Subika Naseer’s work explored the hidden clues of life
and she had used aquatint, line-etching and soft-ground stippling
to unfold its complexities. The only other printmaker, Sara
Ansari, had titled her work, “Solving a puzzle named thesis.”
Her focus was on what she called “my immediate space,”
and added that “the chine collage in my work concerns
my feelings regarding those spaces.”
Ideas
and concepts were given some interesting interpretations in
the ceramic sculptures section. Sabeen Ashraf Sattar’s
cut fruits, like pineapples, pomegranates, coconuts and bananas
were likened with the external and the internal differences
in appearance that are peculiar to humans as well. The idea
has significance as a concept but the works stood out more on
account of their attractive appearances. Moomal Halepota had
made abstracted, cylindrical and tubular bottles inspired by
female forms and postures to express her throwing, slabbing,
pinching and coiling techniques, treatment and texture. Uzma
Abid’s functional impact lights were created in interesting
shapes of basic forms. Hina Ali Dawood had worked with nesting
forms and her pieces came together to form a family and she
equated this with the human characteristics of individuality
and ability to group together as a family. Farheen Mehdi’s
outdoor pieces were inspired by zen garden aesthetics while
Sonia Durrani capitalised on the increasing popularity of Japanese
food here to make Utsuwa, a Japanese name for serving dishes.
Wood-fired and food-specific, her Utsuwa were entirely utilitarian
and conformed to Japanese aesthetics. The utility aspect of
ceramics enlarges its reach, according it a usefulness that
decorative sculpted forms often lack.
A
substantial thesis turnout gave a fair indication of the new
generation mindset and their dilemmas. The inescapable stamp
of western imagery, especially the kind accessed directly from
magazines, journals and the internet, was evident but the students
also expressed genuine concern for complex issues. Last year,
a number of graduates opted for a major in miniature painting.
Sadly, this year the miniature scored no hits. However, the
painterly exercise – of the oil on canvas variety –
has made a grand comeback. Drawing and painting are essential
building blocks of the academic regimen, and Indus harvested
a bumper crop this year.
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