Portfolio: Lush reveries
Artist Michelle Farooqi’s exhibition titled A Walk in the Park might be considered an effort to escape the city’s tortuous concrete jungle, a symbol of mankind’s primeval search for paradise or an aesthetic manifestation of what she calls “active meditation” in the parks. The exhibition took place in Lahore’s Alhamra Art Centre recently and exhibited 18 of her landscapes done in pastels, either in Lahore’s Race Course Park or in Canada.
Her command over pastels, a rare medium in which she is self-trained, is remarkable. Each painting has a dreamy hue, reminding one of the French impressionists like Claude Monet and classicist Bouguereau. Instead of reflecting over social issues like terrorism or poverty, or letting an idea like feminism push her images, she delves deep within herself, as she herself puts it: “I am inside, looking out.”
Farooqi’s love for walking is not surprising. This is probably why she lives right next to the Race Course Park in Lahore. “I am idler at home than on my walks,” she quips.
Michelle Farooqi puts her fascinating walk in the park on canvas
Many great artists like J.M.W. Turner, writers like Charles Dickens, poets like William Wordsworth and philosophers like Aristotle were great walkers. Writers like Virginia Woolf and James Joyce invented peripatetic protagonists and highlighted what they perceive in cities like Dublin and London and remodel it through the prism of their path, restructuring the existing landscape with their cerebral one — somewhat like Farooqi does with those photos.
The artist keeps a record of whatever catches her fancy through photos and revisits them before painting — removing objects, improving the composition, light and adding her signature style to the scene. Most paintings capture vast swathes of lushness that extend into an equally glorious sky. She depicts the broadest view a naked eye can capture, interspersed with bright yellow leaves, orange bushes, brownwood or people in sharply coloured clothes.
In some paintings, an object takes centre stage — a stream, a log or the interlocked roots of a banyan tree. Her canvas is not just enormous but detailed as the reflections in the stream, the separate blades of glass, the rocks and shrubs, are all distinct. The composition is natural yet inventive, everything is still yet thriving, on the verge of some action; the birds are about to fly away, the clouds and people are on the move and you can almost hear the leaves rustling in the wind.