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Ahmed
Ali Manganhar's recent display of paintings, 'Monet & Co,' at
Rohtas 2 in Lahore, took viewers by surprise. The reason for this
was the open, honest manner of engagement with materials, surface
and content, that the painter had so obviously enjoyed and it was
this quality that first came across to the viewer. As these are
not qualities apparent in every offering to the art world, it certainly
deserves a mention.
The surface was the initial unexpected element in Manganhar's
work, for instead of the usual watercolour paper, board, wood panel
or canvas, he had painted on gift paper. Why gift paper, one might
ask? What he achieves with this medium, is a spontaneity and a joie-
de-vivre. While he maintains the same scale throughout the 18 paintings
on show, ( 20" x 30" - the actual size of gift paper),
the variety in design, the particular choice of (painted) excerpts
from the impressionist school or High Renaissance, and their juxtaposing
was where the mettle of this painter showed. His placing of Velasquez's
famous self-portrait against a repeated diamond-shaped pattern,
which reflected the somber tones in his clothes, had one doing a
double-take. We see Van Gogh against a 'wallpaper' of sunflowers;
we see the all too familiar, (yet in this context, a little unfamiliar),
vase of sunflowers against yet more flowers, set in a pattern of
checks and squares. Degas is pictured in an almost magic-eye surface
of flowers and leaves, which seems to make him almost walk out of
the picture plane. These are all painted forms and images. It is
in the clever use of the gift paper as background, cliff-top, garden,
lake and so on that the painter engages our attention. It is precisely
in these flights of fancy that Manganhar's strength as an artist
lies.
What comes through strongly is, however, an element one would like
to see developed further. In not experimenting with the scale, the
artist leaves the viewer wondering what impact an image would make
if, for example, an entire wall was covered with gift paper (always
aptly chosen) and painted over in sure strokes, bringing well known
faces to life.
Manganhar's innate sense of space, balance and composition have
allowed him to create an image like 'The heights of impressionism.'
It requires not only a sure hand, confident of the materials it
uses, but an inner sense of what a composition should be like, to
create such a complete image.
The artist's wonderfully piquant use of painters like Monet, Carravagio,
Zahoor-ul-Akhlaque and Velasquez, against these backdrops of repeated
flowers, stems and geometric shapes, also recall a stage-setting
with painted backdrops. It contains a pixie-like quality which in
no way demeans the essence of the originals, rather it underlines
the painter's debt to these giants of the art world. What is refreshing
is that we as viewers feel no awe in viewing this work, which is
a customary reflex upon entering the hallowed space of an exhibition
hall. There is, rather, a sense of immediacy that is appealing and
allows the viewer to see not only Manganhar's paintings but to think
anew of the originals that inspired him.
They serve to connect us in the present day to these well-worn images
from our past. It is their veracity and enduring quality that is
enhanced.
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