National delusion, Ahsan Jamal
Giving visual definition to a psychological issue, the current exhibition at the Sanat Gallery, Karachi, titled Narcissus Reborn is curated by Asim Akhtar, and features artists such as Aakif Suri Ahsan Jamal, Alina Akbar, Babar Gull, Faizan Naveed, Hadia Moiz, Madiha Sikander, Mudassar Manzoor, Nida Bangash, Sana Kazi, Sobia Ahmed, and Wardha Shabbir. According to the curatorial brief, the exhibition examines “Narcissus, and narcissism as structural and theoretical, as well as narrative or illustrative impulses.”
A potent subject for artists for more than 2,000 years, Narcissus is the origin of the term narcissism, a fixation with oneself and one’s physical appearance. According to Roman poet Ovid, when Narcissus, a hero of Greek mythology spurned the love of a nymph called Echo, she appealed to the goddess Nemesis for revenge. Nemesis cast an evil spell on him. Narcissus saw his own image in a pool of water and fell in love with it. Spellbound, he wasted away, mesmerised by his own beauty reflected on the water surface. He left his name both to the narcissus (daffodil) that sprang up on the banks where he died, and to psychology.
The conceptual elements of Ovid’s Narcissus exploring literal and metaphorical self-reflection, mirroring and doubling, endure as compelling subjects today and artists in Narcissus Reborn build on these cues. However, some of the artists’ unique skill sets and innovative techniques (related to their essential grounding in conventional miniature art) take precedence over their articulation of narcissism.
An exhibition that examines the conceptual elements of Narcissus and narcissism and explores the literal and metaphorical self-reflection
Sana Kazi’s portrayal of Narcissus, in ‘Beyond logic and proportion’, centres on competent studies of agonised Greek figures, but it is her unusual, hand-pressed photo-transfer technique, graphite drawings, and gouache splashes on ash covered wasli that first impact the eye.
Similarly, it is the delicacy, purity, and organic beauty of Nida Bangash’s ‘Tree of life’, letterpress printing, and use of natural pigments on paper that fascinates the viewer.