Portfolio: Lahore Lahore hai
Depicting Lahore in images is an old practice and its early patterns could be found in the miniature paintings of the Mughal era. During the 19th century, the British colonial painters such as James Duffield Hardinge (1798-1863), Henry Ambrose Oldfield (1822-1871), and Alfred Frederick Pollock Harcourt (1836-1910) became obsessed with the architecture, street culture, couture and diversity of professions, which first they depicted in their own realistically rendered water colours and prints, and then passed this custom to the local atelier of Company Painters.
Lahore, being the cultural hub, played a vital role in the arts, literature and culture in the mid-20th century; especially, visual art was inspired by the rich panoramic beauty of the walled city and life around its 13 gates, so an exclusive genre of cityscape came into existence, as early as the 1950s. Anna Molka Ahmad, Naseem Hafeez Qazi, Mahmood Hassan Rumi, Ghulam Mustafa, Ajaz Anwar, Iqbal Hussain, Mehboob Ali, Zulfiqar Ali Zulfi and Durre Waseem are few notable names in this connection.
Sarfraz Musawir represents the contemporary generation of cityscape painters in Pakistan, who with his distinctive illustrative skills, has documented the sights and sound of this marvellous city; in a recent exhibition at the Gallery 6 Islamabad, under the title of “Jin’nay Lahore Nai Vekhya” meaning ‘One, who has not visited Lahore’.