DISCOURSE: PAKISTAN’S ART TRAJECTORIES
On revisiting art practices of the early post-independence years one learns of the painting traditions that Pakistan inherited and the cultural and political environment within which they evolved. Technically four approaches stand out because they were different from each other in attitude and temperament. These painting trajectories also defined the nature of the art legacies and the extent to which they were being utilised, modulated or rejected in favour of new trends. For senior artists, with established careers in pre-partition India, fidelity to tradition was important; those exposed to Western styles under the British Raj continued their pursuit of Victorian academic Naturalism while the younger painters opted for the novelty of 20th century modernism.
An ‘Oriental’ tradition of small paintings comprising layers of transparent washes first originated in Calcutta in the early 20th century. An adapted version of this New Bengal School style found favour with artists in Punjab but it was Abdur Rehman Chughtai’s unique take on this tradition — technically and conceptually — that infused the style with a singular brilliance. Acknowledged as the national artist of Pakistan, Chughtai was among the few — or the only one — to be recognised in India both before and after Partition with a considerable following abroad as well. His early figurative paintings, representative of undivided India of the ’20s, visualised Indo-Islamic history, Urdu and Persian poetry as well as Hindu gods and goddesses, Buddhist subjects and Indian cultural life.
After independence, illustration of Hindu/ Buddhist subjects and Ghalib’s poetry was set aside as Chughtai became immersed in giving visual definition to Allama Iqbal’s poetry and philosophical musings that had inspired the Pakistan movement. This corpus titled Aml-i-Chughtai was his magnum opus. He also painted Mughal royalty, Islamic heroes and characters from classic folk legends, genre scenes and college girls.
Four painting traditions define the nature of art legacies in Pakistan
Echoes of this reclaiming of heritage for the modern world that Chughtai spoke of years ago can be witnessed in the primacy the contemporary miniature enjoys today. Deconstruction and reinvention of the orthodox miniature might not have taken place if Haji Mohammed Shariff and Sheikh Shujaullah — the last of traditional miniature painters in Lahore at the time of Partition— had not persevered in preserving the orthodox mannerism. The two ustads had ancestral links to the profession and were the last of their breed in Pakistan. Both had enjoyed considerable respect and prosperity between 1935 and 1947 when British interest in miniatures was growing in Delhi. When their British patrons left, they survived by teaching and through occasional commissions.