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In
the last decade, the neo-miniature has acquired the status of a
genre of expression for South Asian artists who have been trained
in the traditional technique but seek to converse with the world
in contemporary lingo. Whereas its earliest protagonists, Shahzia
Sikander and Aisha Khalid, adopted the neo-miniature to assert ethnic
identity on a postmodern platform, currently the neo-miniature is
replete with issues ranging from personal narratives to international
politics. The subject of critique is no more the degree of affinity
with the traditional medium or the extent of hybridity and cross-cultural
coding that the neo-miniature exhibits but, rather, the success
with which individualised meanings are conveyed through neo-miniature
paintings. The 'miniature' in neo-miniature is thus divorced or
liberated (however, the reader's perception permits) from its historical
significations of imperial identity, collaborative endeavour, animated
narrative, patterned meditations and connoisseurial standards. Instead,
its meaning is limited to a reference to size, vasli and method
of brushwork. The very postmodernism that had ushered the neo-miniature
on to the world stage has effectively resulted in the subsequent
loss of its meaning. Once this shift is acknowledged and its causes
and results embraced, we can begin to see the neo-miniature on its
own terms.
'Associated
Metaphors: An exhibition of Neo-Miniatures' marks this new phase
in interpreting the neo-miniature and re-frames the parameters for
its critique.
Curated
by Sumaira Tazeen, this exhibit brings together the work of five
neo-miniaturists, chosen particularly for the way they address gender
issues. A debut project for Sumaira Tazeen, the exhibition presents
the work through the lens of Freudian discourses on symbolism and
gender. According to her, the artists' works usually address issues
of the opposite gender but, in effect, it is really a reflection
of their own complexes. The themes of repression and projection
are thus best queried through an examination of the artwork along
gendered divisions.
In
Mahreen Asif Zuberi's work, the hand drill is used as a metaphor
for a vibrator. Drill bits, framed individually in pristine cerulean
halos, lead to the hand drill itself, which lies without any attached
fixtures. By placing the bits in heroic seclusion, juxtaposed with
the "impotent" drill, Zuberi celebrates female sexual
pleasure and simultaneously capitalises on male castration anxiety.
In another instance, the drill stands outside a wire mesh screen
which encloses a set of plush red arm chairs. The colour of the
arm chairs, and the comfort they exude, insinuate sexual opportunity
to which the wire mesh denies access. Despite its instrumentality
in affixing the wire mesh screen, the hand drill itself becomes
a redundant outlier in the situation. Zuberi thus playfully rejects
the primacy of the male counterpart in a sexual encounter since
it is the agency of penetration that vests the male with the power
of domination.
Aisha
Rahim's work, however, seems to accept the active and passive roles
in the sexual encounter without reading any power play in them.
Most of her compositions follow a dyad organisation, with a male
and female element. The elements read as male in one painting are
cleverly transposed as female in the other. For instance, in 'Theory
of Love,' which is an earth-toned diptych, a wreath of cactus appears
in opposition to a delicately delineated lotus. Although both are
circular forms, the prickliness of one and the softness of the other
makes the former male and the latter female, resting in perfect
harmony, laced together with criss-crossed string. However, in 'Reflection
II,' the silhouette of a flowering cactus hovers over a realistic
rendition of it and dons a Mughal prince's headgear. The impulse
to read the cactus as a male because of its thorns is suddenly thwarted
here by the presence of its flowers which testify to its female
fertility. So the cactus becomes the female part, and its silhouette,
"ridden" by the headgear, becomes the male element.
Based
on the suggestive mushroom form, Hadia Moiz's work takes the organic
motif and contorts it into intertwining bodies which are reminiscent
of the mithunas on Hindu temples. Drops of fluid leaking from red
mandorla shapes are set against a background of pattern in some
cases and newspaper clippings in others. The inclusion of text works
well in 'Intimation Overlapping,' which is an essentialist article
on the Post-Impressionists and their inspirations, as it begins
to hint at the cross-pollination of artistic ideas as well as the
exclusion of any mention of eastern influences in the formation
of the western canon.
Naveid
Iqbal also takes the explicit approach, but the imagery acknowledges
the reciprocity of pleasure. Iqbal fuses the mushroom with thonged
sandals which rest erotically between a woman's toes. An allusion
to female arousal, the centrally placed slippers in his compositions,
however, carry a phallic significance. Despite the androgynous colour
choices, male dominance on the picture plane is not neutralised.
It is as if the presence of female responsiveness serves only as
an affirmation of the centrality of the male in the discourse.
Shoaib
Mahmood digresses from an anatomical interplay but uses clothing
to query the differences in gender and their preferences. Although
Mahmood, himself, sees his work as a commentary on the growing commercialism
in Pakistani society as manifested in the brand culture of today,
the sexuality implicit in the clothing depicted brings to the fore
gendered attitudes. His most interesting pieces are ones which show
contemporary youth and Mughal courtiers standing together, each
clad in their own paraphernalia to highlight their masculinity.
Again, the picture plane is dominated by male characters.
Coming
full circle, it is hard to agree with the statement that artists
vent their own issues through the veneer of the opposite sex. In
each of these artists' work, one finds an open confession of their
own issues rather than those of the opposite sex. What is interesting,
though, is how the male artists perceive and use the male form as
a neutral collective normative whereas the female artists consistently
employ metaphors and literary allusion to suggest rather than represent
male and female forms. Most curious is the fact that whereas the
work of female artists investigates or rebels against inequities,
the work of the male artists does not engage with gendered im/balance
at all. Unlike other Freud-inspired artists such as Dali and Margritte,
these men do not evidence a fear of the opposite sex but are so
secure in their positions of privilege in Pakistani society that
they do not seek to delve into the psyche of women and their issues.

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