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Recently
online gallery Gandhara Art's exclusive outlet, the Gandhara Art
Space, hosted a select show, 'Surreal Narratives' by miniature artist
Mudassar Manzoor. The art on view, a quiet but eloquent body of
work, had instant impact - it stilled the eye and stirred the imagination,
beckoning contemplation at both technical and conceptual levels.
Currently,
the contemporary miniature, thriving on a mushroom swell of horizontal
expansion, is in dire need of a vertical incline. Composed of scores
of middling practitioners and only a handful of 'specialists,' it
needs to bolster its image with fresh innovations and a deeper level
of technical virtuosity. The emergence of a new devotee not only
reinforces the standing of the discipline, but invigorates its thrust
as well.
Manzoor,
as an artist with potential, was singled out when he debuted with
a solo titled 'Belief,' in Lahore in 2007. Spun around a spiritual
quest, the work was executed with a deft hand. A year later, after
two significant international participations in Korea and France,
the artist resurfaces with 'Surreal Narratives' at Gandhara Art
in Karachi. Still relating to the mystical and the otherworldly,
Manzoor has further pared and modulated his content, refined his
rendering and trimmed and sharpened his palette.
Small
in number but huge on effect, this collection of 18 works invites
dialogue with content and examination of the painterly process simultaneously.
An NCA graduate with a major in miniature, Manzoor has a firm grip
over the traditional ethos and technicalities of the genre. His
course of reinvention, unlike most confrontational art today, is
subtle and easy on the eye. A first and obvious departure from tradition
is a change in scale. The paintings reference the miniature but
are large in size. Having done away with the customary 'hashia'
and Arabesque patterns, Manzoor reconstructs and relocates the foliated
borders as per the demands of his compositions. Typical elements
of the Mughal/Persian landscape, the lotus bud, tree images and
curling, diaphanous clouds are similarly exaggerated and modulated.
The organic vegetal form does much to build the allusion of the
other worldly. Manzoor improvises on the conventional miniature
imagery to create mythical shrubs and trees. Gnarled, twisted or
dense with leafs, flowering like magical bonsais or burgeoning with
gilded cupolas/aureoles, his imaginative flora create the surreal
atmosphere of transition that is the crux of his oeuvre.
Jumping
genres, the artist settles on the western realistic sensibility
for the depiction of his human figure. His considerable ability
to render the figure correctly and his attention to anatomical detail
bring credence to the body language of his protagonist. Oblivious
to the world around, his invocatory bodies, arms outspread, beckoning
or raised in prayer, seem to be located in a far-off cosmic space.
If the atmospherics he conjures up are suggestive, the figurative
element in his paintings is more so. The postures and movements
of his models conform entirely to the invocation of the divine.
Bare-bodied, shrouded or veiled, his figures appear to be in communion
with their saviour. At prayer - crouched, standing or simply summoning
the heavens - he adheres strictly to the state of transcendence.
A new reference to the process of 'rebirth' is manifest in the conch
shell/womb and bud image in this series as well.
Dramatic
use of colour spreads - a palette rich and subtle by turns - is
not just intended to seduce the eye but to emphasise the exercise
of transition from one world to another. Deep midnight blues, resonant
reds and greens, juxtaposed with lavish gold embellishment, are
attractive and effective as design ploys, just as the sparing use
of white and yellow are employed to project an ethereal luminous
presence, which adds distinctly to the imaginary aura of divinity
the artist is keen to build.
Some
jarring notes in his otherwise fluid compositions are created by
planar juxtapositions and superfluous insertion of traditional geometric
borders - their hard linear presence disrupts an otherwise seamless
atmosphere of organic imagery.
Conceptually,
Manzoor's paintings revolve around a spiritual centrality, but it
is the visual evocation of the heavenly that brings impact to his
work. The artist needs to guard against overplaying his theme. Imagery
that is contrived and managed, even repetitive and monotonous, can
disturb the fine balance between works that are inspired and those
that are manufactured. One hopes he will not fall prey to 'formulas'
and will continue to work on achieving a more harmonious balance
in his compositions.
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