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As the 21st century
artist struggles to create new myths in the polarised global village,
the conflicts, both social and political, have led to a strange
dialogue with the past by investing new meaning into forms appropriated
from history and popular culture. Modernism's thrust to recreate
the image through philosophic formulae lies by the wayside, replaced
by a new art frontier: technology. This includes both low and high
technology, depending which class of progress your country belongs
to, first or third.
With the use of the popular image from MTV to VTV to Tate Modern,
the new temple of contemporary art includes the blatant rituals
of consumerism. Craft skills and patterns have long been an integral
part of the ornamental in South Asian art. The intervention by urbanisation
and industrialisation has altered the image with the introduction
of new materials and stylistic exposure, the most enduring being
Victorian aesthetics, and the most recent the iconography of computer
graphics.
David C Alesworth's exhibition at Canvas
Gallery is a solo show after many years. His early iron and wood
sculptures at Ziggurat almost a decade ago saw him emerge on the
art scene. From the formalism of that work to the 'popularism' of
his present collection chronicles his art journey in new directions.
At the exhibition the two dominant forms are the teddy bear and
the missile. Cast and constructed from the prototype, they have
been faithfully crafted by skilled metal workers. Since their names,
unlike in his earlier work, are not mentioned, it is probably not
meant to be a collaborative artwork.
The teddy bear is a popular English stuffed toy deeply embedded
in the culture of the island. It inhabits popular children's tales,
and antique teddy bears fetch high prices at auctions. To see teddy
bears sold by street vendors in the bazaars of Karachi must have
left David Alesworth, an Englishman, with a feeling of déjà
vu. Translated into metal with brass polka dots he turns it into
an artistic motif.
There is yet another history embedded in this icon which is not
of cultural transference but of the hunt for cheap labour through
which the original pattern of this stuffed toy must have reached
our shores and other Asian countries who may not even had a historical
link with the UK. Like many other commodities, the surplus or damaged
order is fed into the market and those who have acquired skills
continue to produce them till the domestic demand is exhausted.
Fear and empowerment are the two emotions that inform
our reality as a nuclear power. The propaganda high priests of the
last government had turned the missile form into a national trophy
to be triumphantly displayed as monuments. As it caught the imagination
of popular painters, the form began to appear on trucks, water tankers
and walls. Monumental or small in scale, it gate-crashed into the
emotional and physical space of the Pakistani nation. David Alesworth's
probe series, strategically displayed in the lawn of the gallery
and indoor, echo this reality. To highlight it, he has photographed
these probes in the seemingly tranquil world of fruit sellers and
murghi wallahs etc.
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