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A
brazen show of 'fundamentalist' art in an upbeat gallery like Canvas
is certainly a shift from the norm. Orthodoxy may be rampant in
the country but seldom, if at all, has it been a painterly subject
or the focal point of a solo show.
Abdul
Jabbar Gull's deceptively simple series of paintings, titled 'Ordinary
Souls,' has many a twist to it. He has taken pot-shots, with the
requisite decorum though, at certain aspects of the social and cultural
behaviour ordinary folks exhibit publicly. His brand of ordinariness
is liberally spiked with religio-political overtones. Monotonous,
plain-faced average people in the street, his men, women and children
are products of the madrassah culture. Hijab-clad, chaddar-wrapped
women and the men, clean-shaven and bald, toupee-covered or sporting
clerical beards, are painted with a simplistic naturalism. Gull's
thrust is primarily on the portrayal of a chaste, unadorned, severe
demeanour, conforming strictly to the Islamic code of ethics. He
examines his subjects collectively, as a family or interactive group,
and as individuals, in the light of personal religious beliefs.
By
painting his figures in the act of prayer, Jabbar touches on the
complex issues of sectarianism. Articulating through specific body
language entailed in observing Salat, he records the intricacies
of performing Niyat, Qiyam, Takbeer, Dua etc as per the dictums
of various fiqahs. Religion, it seems, is concentrated entirely
in the enactment of ritual. Certainly for a large segment of the
teeming populace, religion is limited only to obedience and obeisance
of the kind the clerics preach. Jabbar has shown that the tradition
of patent beliefs travels through generations, within clannish groups
and from parent to progeny. Caught in this web, ordinary souls become
victims of a vicious circle.
An
established sculptor with three successful solos to his credit,
Jabbar Gull has opted for a two-dimension surface of oil on canvas
for his present show. This plunge has enabled him to break through
the typecast image his work was acquiring. The advantage of pictorial
narration has given his concepts a wider breadth of expression but
the theoretical thread is still tied to his fascination with mysticism
and religiosity. A native of Mirpurkhas, Gull's affinity with ordinary
souls is genuine because he is one of them. He identifies with that
mindset but his scholastic and academic regimen - a BFA from NCA,
a Fordsburgh residency programme at Johannesburg, workshops at Funda
Community College, Johannesburg, and on-going teaching experience
at Indus Valley School of Arts and Architecture - have broadened
his vision and spurred his urge to question the validity of existing
reality. He says, "to me inquiry is life and while it exists,
questioning is the essence of it, if one is to keep moving and evolving."
His current works record reality and pose questions about the interpretation
of religious beliefs, but it seems that the artist has yet to resolve
his own conflicts. If one follows a line of inquiry though, the
works light up as trigger- points to various live issues simmering
under the fabric of life. As just paintings, however, the art is
austere, stark and blunt. This is by no means a "pretty pictures"
exhibition. Gull has painted tight compositions with large figures
stretching across the canvas from top to toe. This upfront thrust
literally accosts the viewer and the harsh, monochromatic monotony
is also disturbing. Seen in unison, the works evoke a herd mentality.
Some
sculpture on the side, the artist's main forte, has also undergone
a stylistic shift. From solid highly finished pieces, he has moved
to a takhti format mounted on a wooden base. Engraved with markings
that resemble written text around a facsimile of a human face, the
works seem to be contemporary versions of centuries-old primitive
clay tablets inscribed with laws of the land and mounted at vantage
points.
Yet another facet of this exhibition is that its viewership
can extend beyond the normal art-conscious audiences, right down
to the "ordinary souls," whom Jabbar Gull has endeavoured
to portray.
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