Artists’ work: Of similarities and differences
This year’s Venice Biennale had the very first Indo-Pak joint pavilion “My East is Your West” that offered a strong contrast between the softly reflexive works of Shilpa Gupta from Bombay and the loudly spectacular works of Rashid Rana from Lahore. Yet both addressed a shared theme of territorial location and dislocation.
Comparisons may well be odious but are often helpful, especially to the viewer in a dazed state of confusion after seeing too much art. Where the Biennale excess of imagery forces us to scan, this event asked us to slow down and listen to others. Similarly, to compare two exhibitions by South Asian artists in a European capital undergoing extreme stress may help understand the bigger picture through looking at the particular, the macro through the micro. Notwithstanding their differences, Indian artist, Rina Banerjee’s exhibition “Human Traffic” at Galerie Nathalie Obadia in Paris and Pakistani artist, Imran Qureshi’s show “Idea of a Landscape” at Galerie Thaddeus Ropac, Paris share a concern with addressing history through the everyday.
Since Qureshi’s nomination as Deutsche Bank Artist of the Year in 2013, this is his first solo show in Paris. It reveals the challenge he imposes on himself to paint on a large scale in a gestural manner — light years away from the familiar detailed delicacy of his miniature painting. The Western contact with abstract expressionism leads the viewer to an expectation of corporeal abandon in the likes of Pollock or de Kooning. However, the initial impression of resemblance between Qureshi’s splattering and Pollock’s drips is deconstructed on looking closer. Gradually the viewer may come to grasp that the body language is different, how this relates to cultural differences is the bigger question.
Indian artist, Rina Banerjee, and Pakistani artist, Imran Qureshi, are conscious of their post-colonial predicament but Qureshi re-invents traditional practice as a form of resistance, while Banerjee recycles Orientalism as a tool of deconstruction
The artist’s handling of paint on a large scale still makes use of his training as a miniaturist, the brushwork may feel freer due to its ease in covering larger spaces including walls, streets, rooftops and courtyards as well as canvasses, yet on close observation it reveals itself to be wrist-bound rather than embodied. The presence of a few small figurative paintings, as Qureshi says, “To make the connection with the tradition”, reassure viewers of his acclaimed mastery of miniature practice.
In contrast, his recent experimental drawings on paper reveal his ongoing determination to extend the parameters of the field, to stretch his lines and to animate his marks towards a truer transfer of the emotions he feels in counteracting violence. In the spirit of Gandhian ‘homespun’, his hand-made works make vibrant pleas for peace. Conscious of their fragile beauty, he wants to make a link between ethics and aesthetics, to remind us that in between bomb blasts there lies hope.