REVIEW: Modern Art in Pakistan by Simone Wille
Any addition to the historical perspective on art in Pakistan is as welcome as an oasis to our sparse and arid desert of documentation and theoretical writings. Even before we can initiate the debate on whether the new research is ground-breaking or regurgitated, critical or predisposed, vast or limited, we are compelled to offer a grateful acknowledgement to the author for making it happen. But with Simone Wille’s new book Modern Art in Pakistan there are no ifs and buts: we can only thank our luck for the comprehensive, well-articulated, insightful addition to Pakistan’s library shelves as well as to our fundamental learning of art history.
Modern Art in Pakistan is neither a comprehensive survey nor a wide culturally reflective tome on modernism in Pakistan. In fact it is remarkable in its specificities and the ways in which a contracted trajectory of thought is presented; one which was so influential and persuasive that it embraced, within its parameters, all modernist practice while forming the premise for connections with contemporaneity. Wille refers to the sub indices of “history, tradition, place” and in one fell swoop gives us the lens for the reassessment of modernism in art history.
Wille traces the essential influence of history, more purposely Mughal history, to create the grounds for modernism in Pakistan. She says, “It was either used to glorify a magnificent past prior to colonisation or to establish a Muslim cultural consciousness that stood apart from a nascent Hindu nationalist construction”. She continues to elaborate that art during Mughal rule introduced several ideas and techniques which impacted South Asian art then, and which continues now. She says “it can be stated that modern Pakistani artists came to echo the dynamics of history and tradition, juxtaposing old and new, local and foreign, and in that way responded to the consequences brought about by colonial modernism, the process of decolonisation, and the experiences involved”.
In an endeavour to discover the locus of modern art in Pakistan, Wille leaves no stone unturned and investigates space in very broad terms to understand its influence on art practice. She speaks of place in terms of Partition and the “new place in which a variety of people lived, but shared little”. Wille believes that the heterogeneous population of new Pakistan and the diversity in cultures, identities, class and education served up a multiplicity that affected art and its output deeply. In another respect, Wille refers to space as a construct within the Mughal miniature tradition and speaks about its critical role in the practice of the modernists, particularly Zahoorul Akhlaq.
Wille has done a great service to the documentation of the history of art in Pakistan because she traces the most imperative lineage of influence that has so far been overlooked by historians and researchers, although informally, teachers and professors especially in Lahore have been educating students within this theoretical framework for at least a decade now. The three chapters that constitute the core of the book discuss Shakir Ali, Akhlaq and then the legacy of Pakistan’s modernism in contemporary art as she calls it, which comprises Rashid Rana and a lesser known German artist Beate Terfloth who was deeply influenced by Akhlaq.
Wille determines the role of Akhlaq in the development of modern art as the fundamental nexus between the early phase of the modernist movement and contemporary practice. Akhlaq’s role has been established by Wille without a doubt once and for all, something not achieved by other historians or even by Akhlaq’s biographer Roger Connah. Wille does this convincingly and cogently by tracking the life and works of Akhlaq’s teacher and mentor Shakir Ali, addressing the concerns in Akhlaq’s own practice and then by highlighting Akhlaq’s ambit of influence on his students, the next generation of artists who have taken his legacy forward and brought innovations and new perspectives to his vision, specifically referencing Rana and Terfloth.
Wille discusses six of Ali’s works painted from 1941 to 1966 and reveals “a clear stylistic shift from art that was, initially, concerned with form, towards art concerned with pictorial and material effect. Ali’s development of an aesthetic materiality helped him to liberate painting from the idea of mastery — something that Georges Braque witnessed and valued in Paul Cézanne’s paintings — and something that drew Ali closer towards the mastery of the formless and accidental by which means he introduced new challenges and possibilities, ideas and experiences into his works.” Thus Ali embraces the parameters of modernism and opens up avenues for the induction of postmodernism with Akhlaq becoming Ali’s natural successor.
In writing about Akhlaq’s vital place in the annals of art history, Wille references the relevance of institutions like the National College of Arts, Lahore, which nurtured traditions in art. She says, “One such tradition became the formal investigation of space within painting. Zahoorul Akhlaq initiated and advocated this approach by re-evaluating, revisiting, and re-examining a number of ‘Eastern’ traditions, which he then, together with a segment of certain Western modernisms on the levels of formal experimentation, transformed into a qualitatively new stage in Pakistani modernism.”
Wille writes like a well-trained historian and researcher but without the coldness of empiricism that often pervades theoretical discourse. The one element most visible in the book is her empathy and responsiveness for the country and its art without any of the sentimental indulgence that could deter international readers.
Modern Art in Pakistan: History, Tradition, Place
(ART)
By Simone Wille
Routledge, India
ISBN 978-1138821095
144pp.