Many years back, when I was flipping through the pages of Lahore: Illustrated Views of the 19th Century by Fakir Syed Aijazuddin, a compilation of wonderful paintings by the British painters on Lahore, the dedication page of the book was quite interesting: “For Komail; to compensate for your being born in Abu Dhabi”.
The words were moving enough for a reader to draw a father’s regret for his son to be born outside of the country, rather outside of Lahore. Many years later, the same Komail Aijazuddin surfaced with his paintings to negate that perception, as he possessed all the ingredients of a Lahore-born artist.
The recent exhibition “Grace in Hand” at the Khaas Gallery, Islamabad, showed evidence of diverse qualities, and integrants of a painter truly trained in the oriental tradition of miniature art. The blue, turquoise and red colours, and the usage of gold suggest the painter’s association with the traditional art of the illuminated manuscripts of Persia, widely known as the art of the book in the Western world.