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The
annual Degree Show 2003 of the Visual Studies Department at the
Karachi University literally took off with a bang when rabid elements
vandalised the exhibits, inviting widespread comments on their actions.
The outburst was vehemently condemned throughout the local press,
earning the VS Department extra media footage. However, highlighting
campus politics shifted the focus away from the raison d'etre of
the show, i.e. showcasing the aesthetic endeavours of the final
year students.
Established
in 1999, this was the department's first major turnout of degree
students. Thesis projects on display pertained to the disciplines
of fine arts, graphic design and communication, industrial design
and textile arts and design. The audio-visual section of the graphics
department was subjected to hooliganism, and smashed computers and
television sets told a sorry tale of projects that were. The head
of the VS Department, Durriya Kazi, revealed that instead of the
usual advertising campaigns, the graphics department students had
opted for more subtle choices. They had attempted difficult subjects
like animation. One of the students had assembled a five-minute
animation which, she said, takes a long time to compile. Another
had worked on virtual sets and their usage. This was again something
that could only be seen on the screen - still another had produced
a music video which had triggered the fracas. It was smashed up,
as was the documentary and slide presentation of yet another graduating
student.
Artworks of other faculties escaped damage and were open
for viewing. Fine arts student Amra Mukhtar focused on the miniature
and sculpture. Her theme was Ammi@hotmail.com and her metaphor was
the sewing machine. Miniature paintings and sculpture in wood, stone,
iron and copper, built around machine parts like needles, threads,
bobbins, pedals and plates expressed her interaction with her own
mother. Wacky humour and down-to-earth reality personified her observations,
bringing forth a true-to-life and honest endeavour.
Inspired
by flowers, Zhalay Sarhadi's major was painting and her theme was
about rhythms in life. By projecting rhythms in nature, she tried
to comment on their loss in real life. Her series culminated with
the soft, calm vibrations found in life under water as a direct
contrast to the hectic pressures of daily life. Miniature artist
Naveed Iqbal reflected on transition and memory of friends through
open doors, bus and platform tickets as painterly subjects. Another
student protested against computer technology invading our private
lives through installations. A spinal column for every occasion
was how Erum Ghani constructed her sculpture thesis. In her wardrobe
of spines was a vertebral column made of tea strainers for working
in the kitchen, a soft spine of cotton wool in which one could relax,
a column of springs, nuts and bolts for a bumpy ride on a bus, a
funky, snazzy spine for party wear and a bandaged column if one
was injured.
Print-making
was represented by etchings, woodcuts and mezzotint. Subjects verged
on exploration of the inner self through a plethora of organic symbols
and imagery.
The VS department courses
on textile design aim to prepare students for a role in the textile
industry, both for fashion and furnishing textiles and for adding
value to traditional crafts. This degree show had a fair share of
woven, knitted and assembled goods with market value - Saba Sarwar's
sunlit screens were a smart alternative to the traditional, heavily
carved wooden partitions in common use. Made of thin plywood and
covered in designer fabrics with smart bamboo or wooden frames,
they came in a variety of sizes. Similarly, hand-woven blinds by
Faiza Khatoon and hand-painted blinds by Nuzhatara Aslam were another
way of draping windows. Inspired by the "sussi" fabric
of interior Sindh, Azeem Rana wove thick sturdy upholstery for sofa
and cushion covers. Almost all these products complied as furnishing
materials for home interiors, offices, lobbies, restaurants and
waiting areas. Designer Hina Shahid had opted for designs for a
Japanese restaurant interior and Abdur Rauf experimented with patterns
for wedding shamianas - both have been popular themes with young
graduates for the last few years.
Exhibiting a hands-on feeling for materials, the degree students
expressed themselves freely through a variety of media. By and large,
all of them tried to relate their ideas with life, the immediate
environment in which they moved and the people they interacted with.
They seemed to have a grasp of concept and technique and most products,
especially in the textile department, had an air of completeness
about them. Kazi explained that the curriculum has an integrated
arts programme where students study all the disciplines till the
third year and then have a choice of doing one or all five in the
final year. Their courses are inter-disciplinary and contextualised,
with a strong theoretical base underlying their practical nature.
This is perhaps the city's only art institution offering courses
in industrial design, specially evolved to suit the needs of an
industrial hub like Karachi. "We are so used to copying imported
works cheaply that it is imperative to develop a sense of design
to initiate product-manufacturing," remarks Kazi. Plans to
establish an affiliation with an Italian design institute in Milan
are in the pipeline.
For an institution which has yet to establish itself, the VS department
seems to have made a sound beginning. Degree show 2003 manifested
the students' thinking ability and physical effort, and even though
some tried and tested themes were also attempted, clearly visible
was the endeavour for individual expression.
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