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After
roughly two years of letters and visits to Shahzia Sikander's main
New York Gallery, Brent Sikkema (now Sikkema Jenkins), an invitation
arrived both from the artist and then the Irish Museum of Modern
Art (IMMA) to attend her solo exhibition. I flew straight from Dubai
to Dublin.
Increasingly,
Sikander's preference is to show (and sometimes sell) her work not
so much at respectable galleries around the globe, but rather at
state museums. This follows an enthusiastic reception at the Whitney
Museum of American Art around the year 2000 and later the momentous
group exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art ("Without
Boundary"), which is a rare achievement for such a young artist,
now only 37. But then she is truly an exceptionally gifted artist
of world stature.
To
review her exhibition is a serious business because her catalogues
often have introductions written by big hitters in the academic
world, including the formidable Homi Bhabha, Rothenburg professor
of humanities in the department of English and American literature
at Harvard. Earlier, Professor Bhabha focused primarily on the works
of the stupendously successful artist Anish Kapoor.
In
his introduction to the Irish MOMA catalogue, Professor Bhabha wrote:
"Sikander transforms this conventional 'scale' of the miniature
image in her work - paintings, installations, animations - by shifting
the balance of the picture-plane to allow one to 'look into' a world
as opposed to 'looking at' an image. In my view her method is altogether
more trangressive than that opposition implies. She places her images
at the unsettled intersection of the temporal flux that lures the
viewer's gaze into a double-vision."
And
Sean Kissane, the highly competent curator of the exhibition at
Dublin, remarked: "The construction of silence within the language
of (Nobel laureate) Beckett allows for the creation of spaces within
which meaning oscillates
The oeuvre of Shahzia Sikander can
be interrogated using a similar syntax. As with Beckett, an attempt
to fix a reading of her work consistently fails
as explanations
fall short, meaning enters the territory of the mirage, of illusion
Sikander's work approaches the territory of the dream. This is particularly
evident in the work of
the 'Pathology of Suspension' series
(2005-2007). The fluidity of the gesture employed, the lightness
of touch and delicate energy contained within these paintings appears
to reach toward automatic writing."
Despite
excellent critical comments by museum curators and art theory professors,
it is Sikander's own coherent articulation of her work that is the
most remarkable. When I talked to Sikander specifically about the
painting titled 'Pathology of Suspension No. 12,' which I had just
agreed to buy, she explained its genesis in very clear and intelligible
terms. The work derived from her actual work for the government
of Laos, when she was commissioned to paint murals to replace the
many that had been destroyed by the Khmer Rouge during hostilities.
The seven American cowboy boots visible at the bottom of that work
apparently symbolise the Laotian legend of continuous warfare with
their invaders in which Laotian leaders are beheaded, only to be
replaced each time with seven more heads, in a continuous and endless
battle to repel the invasion of their homeland. The transcribed
script, visible in reddish brown pigment across the work, originates
not from Arabic calligraphy but from the Laotian language script
itself! The work clearly emanated from a critical imagination fired
by a real historical legend.
In one of the best books about her work titled Nemesis, which originated
at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, one of the authors, Ian
Berry, commented: "Your paintings are often described as disturbing
the 'purity' of this traditional form (of the miniature)."
Sikander retorted, "The notion of purity is interesting because
it isn't found in the practice of historical or contemporary miniature
painting. It has nothing to do with purity. It has a lot to do with
appropriation. Within the current practice, there is a lot of blurring
in terms of what gets appropriated from older sources. What makes
a work more original is always interesting because the whole notion
of copying is heavily embedded in the tradition
It started
by my finding ways of stepping outside the tradition in order to
create a dialogue with it. I also started to explore language in
relation to the formal symbols of mathematics and logic. This is
a big part of my most recent drawing series: '51 Ways of Looking.'"
It is worth
recalling that in 2006 Sikander was awarded the McArthur Foundation
grant worth US$500,000. This highly prized honour is part of the
McArthur Fellowship programme, which since 1981 has been disbursing
some US$168 million in grants per annum out of a total fund of US$4
billion. The "genius grant," its highest prize, which
Sikander won, is not given for any single piece of work. The recipient
must show "exceptional merit and promise for continued and
enhanced creative work." Moreover, one cannot apply for it,
but there can be anonymous nominations.
Clearly
Sikander's visible ascent up the ladder of world-class artists has
neither been facile, nor just fortuitous. It has taken consistent
and exceptionally imaginative hard work over at least a decade,
combined with great gifts of providence. She refuses rightly to
be ghettoised as a Pakistani/Muslim/woman artist. This has sometimes
been misunderstood as supercilious jettisoning of her origins and
identity, but in fact it is nothing of the sort. It simply reflects
the reality that such simplistic categorisation is largely a media
and popular construct whereas the position of a serious artist cannot
be pigeonholed in that manner. Anish Kapoor (who also has Jewish
origins) has faced similar problems. But realistically, could either
Sikander or Kapoor have achieved their hard won status if they were
simply compartmentalised as Pakistani or Indian artists? Sikander
never denies her birthplace and educational origins and is proud
of them, but that is only a part of the larger picture that has
evolved.
In
an introduction to an earlier Sikander exhibition titled "51
Ways of Looking," Mohsin Hamid, the celebrated young novelist
and a neighbour from her NCA days in Lahore, wrote: "I watch
as Shahzia mesmerises (the audience) with a story of her life told
through the story of her work, a story so many of us, who have left
the safety of a geographically determined home, desire to tell -
changes in perception and personality, changes in location and events.
She takes us on a journey
from Lahore and meanders through
the boot-wearing American heartlands of Texas and New Mexico before
arriving on the wall of the Whitney in New York
and the evolution
of her work from traditional miniatures to large canvas paintings
"
Through a fascinating
amalgam of her original work in miniature paintings, combined with
new directions in digital, video animation and historically affiliated
large-scale work, Sikander seems to be continually relishing new
challenges, and her output is being recognised by galleries and
public museums all over America and overseas. Mercifully, her work
is still reasonably priced - even for a large work - compared to
the crazy millions being paid nowadays for gimmicky works of younger
well known artists in the West. 
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