Shadi Khan, the wood-carver of Wazirabad
Born in Wazirabad into a family which had migrated from Gurdaspur, a self-taught sculptor and painter, Shadi Khan lived a rich childhood in the woods around his hometown, especially on the bank of the Chenab. He would run away from school during the break and spend hours roaming around Palkhu Nullah and the architectural structures of Mughal and Sikh periods. His love for nature and the stunningly beautiful works of unknown artisans in the old buildings were the inspirations to draw and paint at a tender age.
“Hindu temples of Wazirabad, Shesh Mahal and Gura Kotha, a gurdwara of Guru Hargobind era, had a lasting impression on my mind. I had heard shocking stories of Sikh massacre in this temple during the Partition in 1947.
“The buildings and the artworks in the interiors were in good condition. There were no encroachments by the land mafia, the surroundings of Wazirabad were lush green. Even the water in Palkhu Nullah coming from Jammu was transparent, clean and drinkable,” he recalls.
Shadi Khan would sketch on paper and scribble on walls. With regular practice, he developed skills to paint lush-green landscape in his neighourhood and the portraits of film actresses from magazines.
A gift of a Russian wood carving tools set from his painter friend Akram Varraich in 1993 was a watershed moment in his life as an artist. He calls Akram his guru.
“Guru (Akram Varraich) handed me the tools and asked me to start wood carving. I was not familiar with this tough medium. But I already had a strong desire to make something memorable, so I took up the challenge.”
With no training of handling the tools, he started with hit-and-trial method. He says that the woodgrains became my guide very soon. He got the basic understanding by looking at the wood carvers making flowers and foliage on furniture.
“My first work was portraying an old temple with an oak tree. I had done the basic carving on the spot and finished the final details from a detailed study drawing. The emergence of forms out of wood hooked me. I kept on working like crazy, daily for long hours and it became a lifetime romance,” he recalls.
Shadi Khan displayed his works in a couple of group shows in Allah Bux Library and Waheed Tea Stall, a hub of local literary and political activists. Carving for more than two decades, he is grateful to painter Shahid Mirza for curating his show at Chitarkar, Lahore, and Ayesha Nadir Ali and Huma Safdar for bridging him to the art collectors in the provincial capital.