Cover Story: A whirlpool of fire
Capturing the rhythm and pulse of Sadequain’s art is not for the faint-hearted, not just because of its intensity and magnitude, but also because of the complex cultural strains running through it. The recent Oxford University Press publication, Sadequain: And the Culture of Enlightenment, by well-known art critic Akbar Naqvi, has an edge over other philosophical commentaries on the artist and his art as the author had the privilege of reviewing Sadequain’s art during his lifetime. He knew him personally and possesses extensive knowledge of the cultural environment within which Sadequain evolved.
This volume elects to flesh out a holistic picture of the artist by locating him “in his correct multicultural context, one which includes ancient Indian mythology, Arabic, Persian and Urdu literature, as well as the Muslim Enlightenment of the Raj.” By reconstructing the cultural perspective relevant to each aspect of Sadequain’s oeuvre, painting, khattati, khushkhati in line and rubai, Naqvi establishes the nature and role of multiple influences that fed into his art. The author’s emphasis is not just on defining Sadequain but by doing so to also highlight prominent facets of ‘enlightenment’ (roshan khayali) in the culture of “al-Hind” that has enabled the new and the modern to evolve. So, while Sadequain is the protagonist in the book the culture narrative is not a sub-text; it moves as a parallel force to establish a trail of the spirit of co-existence, tolerance, creativity and inventiveness.
Akbar Naqvi demystifies Sadequain’s body of work
An entire chapter devoted to the malamati tradition describes its specifics, evolution and relevance to Sadequain’s art. Under the influence of Sufi philosophy, malamat, meaning blame or condemnation, found a home in Persian and Urdu poetry and in the Indo-Persian culture it was “the voice of the soul of the faryadi, of men too weak to stand up to Satan but strong enough never to let Allah go from their hearts. Art resolved to solve the puzzle.” This culture (tehzib) accepted man as an aberrant or immoral creature but not a refuter of Allah. Naqvi observes that Sadequain was a “malamati like Hafiz, Ghalib, Dard, Mir,” who “let his spiritual honesty and integrity lead him to voluntary damnation by proxy, the state in which he found peace.” The Sar-ba-kaf, head in hand image is a defining feature of Sadequain’s art — he “punished his body, in life as well as in his drawings and paintings unlike any other artist in Pakistan.” Like the Sufi sensibility of assuming the persona of a sinner to expose hypocrisy in society he preferred shocking exhibitionism over ceremonial piety to bare social evil. Possessing the courage to uphold the truth and suffer for it Sadequain was able to adopt many behroops or disguises in order to “awaken us to our values of culture and art.” This eclectic art was a “manifesto of liberation” which ultimately connected with the “primordial covenant between himself and Him.”