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After
missing many deadlines, the National Art Gallery (NAG) finally opened
its doors in August 2007 to give visitors an opportunity to see
the largest-ever collection of Pakistani Art showcased in 16 curated
exhibitions under the title, Moving Ahead.
The
regal red brick building of the National Art Gallery, poised on
a low hillock, is located diagonally opposite the Parliament House
in Islamabad and can be accessed from Constitution Avenue. This
exclusive address gives visibility to the institution, but can present
accessibility issues in times of a security crisis.
"The
whole concept of our design for the National Art Gallery is a series
of squares, which is the essence of the universal whole," explains
Naeem Pasha in the catalogue. "We arrive at this form from
nature, tradition, unconscious creativity of the folk and the concept
of a circular circulation pattern which is the essence of viewing."
This has been interpreted into an architectural design with multi-levelled
spaces and light sources that provide an element of surprise in
the large and small exhibition halls, without distracting from the
exhibits. The medium-sized auditorium and courtyard, with detailed
brickwork, are rescued from the mundane and connected with the exterior.
A variation in the material and pattern add a subdued textural richness
to the connecting hallways and corridors.
The
National Art Gallery project was first initiated in 1981, but the
will to complete it was lost in the political agendas of changing
political regimes till it was taken up again several years ago and
Naeem Tahir, the director general of the Pakistan National Council
of the Arts (PNCA), was allocated funds for its completion by the
present government.
The
part of the building yet to start functioning includes the Honor
Galleries on the third floor and the basement storage vaults, which
will be operative by the end of the year, says Jamal Shah, director
of NAG. But at this nascent stage, NAG is facing financial constraints
and the inaugural show may have to come off sooner than later. At
the inauguration there was much talk about a renewed commitment
to art and President Musharraf went on to call the visual arts of
Pakistan the country's best kept secret. Now is the time to translate
that talk into money and action so that the show can be extended
and the maximum number of citizens, particularly students, can experience
this cultural phenomenon.
In a break from earlier practices, PNCA invited curators from all
over the country to present curatorial proposals for the inaugural
shows. After more than a year, these exhibitions have been installed
and collectively project the breadth of the formalist movements
and individual innovation in a powerful visual expression that has
evolved in response to the epoch the artists have lived and worked
in.
Three survey shows provide the visitor with a historical space perspective.
Leading from the foyer into the Grand Hall is the show Iconic Presence,
which establishes the inspirational energy of the early masters.
Curated by Jamal Shah, its chronological display gives an overview
of the stylistic and conceptual evolution of painting through national
masterpieces from the PNCA collection.
A similar show Celebration, curated by Marjorie Hussain, on the
first floor, offers a glimpse into the diverse art practices of
47 practicing artists, mainly from Karachi and other parts of Sindh.
Just two galleries away is The Making of History in which the curator,
Rahat Naveed Masud, concentrates on the artists of Lahore linked
to the National College of Arts and the Fine Arts Department of
the Punjab University to underscore the influence of the two mentors,
Shakir Ali and Anna Molka Ahmed, who headed these institutions.
Despite the popular belief that sculpture has few exponents, An
Intensity of Space and Substance surprises the visitor with the
revival of the three-dimensional form.
In the presence of works of Novera Islam, a pioneer, and Shahid
Sajjad, the solitary sculptor who persevered against great odds
in the most repressive of times, is a large body of contemporary
sculpture. The exhibits - many of them have been commissioned by
the curator Salima Hashmi - exude an experimental zeal. Their content
and unconventional material blur the line between conventional sculpture,
installation and third-dimensional art objects.
Similar tensions between conventionality and the avant-garde inform
Re-forming the Landscape, curated by Nazish Attaullah. The transformation
within this popular genre is evident from the formalist and conceptual
interpretations on display.
The thematic shows Love and The Figurative Impulse are investigations
into the time-honoured focus of art. The curators, Quddus Mirza
and Aasim Akhtar respectively, present a provocative reading from
the oeuvre of Pakistani artists.
The Ceramic Gallery of NAG features Hasan Kuzagar Kay Naam. Curated
by Niilofur Farrukh, the show is dedicated to the continuum of clay
as a creative medium. The works define new trajectories in ceramic
art that challenge the stereotypical perception of the medium.
Two smaller shows have been dedicated to individuals, Eqbal Geoffrey
and Masood Kohari. Located in a makeshift gallery near the entrance,
curator Amna Pataudi has mounted the witty mixed media collages,
crafted from the popular print media of Geoffery in a show , titled
Outreach of Neo Renditions 1957-2007. The glass reliefs by Masood
Kohari greet visitors with their fragile translucence in the foyer.
Kohari who is also its curator, has titled the show Transfuge.
Curator Hanif Waqar's exhibition Visual Concept is an inclusive
gesture that showcases outstanding talents in the country that have
fallen though the cracks of the curatorial discourse of other shows.
The diasporic artists, who have gained recognition in their new
homeland, make a comeback in Atteqa Ali's show , titled Homecoming.
Her other exhibit, Out of the Cube, comprises work commissioned
for spaces in the elevator, washrooms and staircases to challenge
fixed notions of art and its installation.
Dialogue with Tradition presents an insider's view of the revivalist
movement of the neominiature. Its curator, Imran Qureshi, presents
lineage as a challenge open to reinterpretation. Displayed in the
exhibition is the response of eight neominiaturists, to select miniature
paintings by the pioneer Ustad Haji Mohd Sharif from the PNCA's
collection.
Another show that looks at traditional art forms, Envoy of Wisdom
curated by Rasheed Butt, with its emphasis on immaculate skill and
understanding of scripts, projects formalistic purism with authority.
Even to the jaded eyes of art professionals, the coming together
of some 400 works has been an intellectually invigorating experience
and its significance can be understood at many levels.
While the emphasis, understandably, is on contemporary art practice
as indicated by the title Moving Ahead, what is sorely missed is
a more extensive display of the art of masters like Sadequain and
Shakir Ali in the Honor Galleries to not only acknowledge their
contribution but add weight to the historical perspective, critical
to any national collection.
The exhibitions have given art critics and historians an opportunity
to see the emergence of new idioms and its articulation facilitated
by technologies.
The apparent shift from modernism to postmodern concerns has hastened
the collapse of conventional boundaries. Contemporary art has taken
on a pluralistic persona, and its strength lies in its ability to
adapt the local and the global into an accessible hybrid vocabulary.
Also highlighted is the increasingly marginalised position of the
painting, as we have known it for the last few decades. New ways
of seeing translates content in art objects, installations, digital
imaging etc. Time and space conundrums are taken up in video art.
Many artists have successfully extended their work to video art,
pointing to new media intervention in visual expression.
Within this context, the ascendancy of neominiature as the bridge
between tradition and 21st-century global imperatives has created
a synergy that reconciles cultural continuity within a contemporary
framework.
The outstanding talent of Rashid Rana, whose ability to conceptualise
with ease in multiple media and carry out an interface between the
local and the global, has increased expectations of him. Without
a doubt the baton of his mentor, Zahoorul Akhlaq, has passed on
to him. Also noteworthy are Ruby Chishti, Roohi Ahmed and Khalid
Chishti for their confident handling of unconventional material
to evoke emotionally charged forms. And after this show, Sadia Salim,
Shazia Wasim, Ghania Badar and Kaif Ghaznavi will be remembered
as the ceramists who pushed clay into the ambit of the conceptual
debate.
The display of Eqbal Geoffery's work, which cannot be easily accessed
via the gallery circuit, offered a rare viewing of this important
artist who has distanced himself from the mainstream. The same is
true of Kohari's reliefs in the demanding medium of glass, which
the resourceful artist has crafted in the most rudimentary conditions
with the help of rural craftsmen.
In
many ways, Kohari's work can be viewed as a symbol of the hardships
faced in the absence of state-run studio facilities and an economic
safety net for artists over the last six decades. And it would not
be amiss to dedicate the stately edifice of the Natinal Art Gallery
to the indomitable spirit of the Pakistani artist.
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