Let Peace Survive, Qudsia Nisar
As modern women, unafraid to mingle and speak their minds in a society dominated by men, they often attracted admirers within the art community — both welcome and unwanted! There were some marital liaisons. Mansur Rahi and Hajra were married, artist Maqsood Ali wed Nahid, and I was fortunate to win Lubna’s hand.
After an art exhibition, evening papers would publish spreads of the inauguration – often a sketchy write-up accompanied by pictures of female art admirers, frequently ignoring the paintings themselves!
The early art writers were men. Sultan Ahmad, Muhammad Jami, Akbar Naqvi and I wrote for various periodicals, and art reporting became a serious matter. The earliest female writer was Marjorie Hussain, a pioneer in her own right. She was followed by a distinguished line of female writers who dominate the art criticism scene today.
Group exhibitions began to give way to one-person shows, and Nahid and Qudsia credit Ali Imam for being one of the foremost mentors of women artists. Both recall how Ali Imam’s Indus Gallery exhibited women artists alongside their male counterparts in group shows, and when he felt their work was mature and they were prolific enough, he encouraged them to have one-person shows in his gallery.
Ali Imam held the first all-women group show featuring 14 women artists, most of who are represented in the current exhibition which is being held almost four decades after the landmark show. Critiquing the Indus show at that time, Dr Akbar Naqvi wrote in an article ‘The Fair 14’ in Herald, January 1981: “Some of the most promising painters at work in Pakistan today are women, not men.” It was a tribute to the achievements that these young women had made in a decade.
This exhibition attempts to answer the question: where are these women artists today?
Rabia Zuberi’s sculptures paved the way for her ‘People series’ paintings, representing groups of people against stark but colourful backgrounds — figures that are reminiscent of her sculptural elements. ‘Rabia Apa’ as she is affectionately called in the artist community, continues to be active in the art world, both painting and gently nurturing the KSA into an ever-growing institution. These paintings form a part of the show.
Hajra Mansur lives and works out of Islamabad as an accomplished wash painting artist of national renown. Two of her works are exhibited in the show.
Nahid Raza is a prolific artist who continues to challenge her audience to think. She has been principal of the Central Institute of Arts. The works she is displaying are fresh from her ‘Portrait of a Woman’ series.
Riffat Alvi has had a 30-year career shaping the VM Art Gallery from a forlorn small studio into one of the largest art spaces in Karachi, mentoring fledgling artists with art competitions and shows, and holding major retrospective shows. She is represented with her earth-inspired paintings.
Noorjahan Bilgrami is a multi-faceted artist, who etches paints and designs textiles. She is one of the founders of the Indus School of Arts, and successfully runs the Koel gallery.
Meher Afroz has painted consistently over the years, producing exquisite works of art. Her current showings are paintings done on delicate, transparent, multi-layered paper.
Qudsia Nisar continues her work as an artist and educator, having served as principal at the Central Institute and head of the fine arts department at Bahawalpur University. Her paintings on display are from her ‘Paintings for Peace’ series.
Sumbul Nazir and her sisters migrated to the US, where she lives with her husband and son. She has not visited Pakistan to show her work for some years now, and unfortunately her work is hard to locate.
Lubna Agha: We — Lubna and I — migrated to the US in 1981, where she studied art and had several one-person shows in California. She returned periodically to hold one-person shows in Karachi. Unfortunately, her career was interrupted in its prime with her passing in 2012. A major retrospective of her work was held at the VM Gallery in 2016. Three of her watercolours are on display.
I have had the privilege of knowing and following most of these artists personally over the years. They are talented and brilliant women, many of whom are recipients of coveted national and international awards — including the Pride of Performance by the government — and have shown in galleries and biennials around the world.
Art critic Amra Ali writes in ‘Women and Recent Art: Some Thoughts’ for ArtNow: “The contribution of women artists … comprises many stories of celebration, resilience, resistance and inspiration.” This exhibition celebrates the brave band of young women artists who overcame the odds to become torch-bearers for successful female artists who followed them almost seamlessly into the art world. Together, they broke the glass ceiling with their collective efforts and helped make Karachi a cosmopolitan artistic hub in its own right.
“Renaissance Women” will be displayed at the Chawkandi Gallery, Karachi from March 13 till March 19, 2017
The exhibition is dedicated to the memory of Lubna Agha, one of the leading lights of the women’s renaissance
Yusuf Agha, who curates the current show, was an art writer for Herald in the ’70s
Published in Dawn, EOS, March 12th, 2017