STUDIO: LIVING AND BREATHING ART
Cubist Mansoor Rahi and orientalist Hajra Mansoor, now married for 48 years, think on the same level but work at different levels. In their Islamabad house which they painstakingly and lovingly built 30 years ago, Rahi works in the basement while Hajra’s studio is on the ground floor — which also houses their drawing room where they entertain their guests and meet their buyers. But they sleep on the same level, on the first floor of the house.
To this writer’s surprise, they are much too disciplined in their timings. One would have thought that their working hours would be determined by inspiration, particularly in the case of Hajra, whose style is spontaneous and lines delicate. But she has been influenced by hubby dear’s set pattern of living and working.
They came from different backgrounds. Rahi was born in Maldah (West Bengal) in 1939 but moved with his family to Rajshahi after Partition, where his father was posted as district judge. On completing his schooling in the town, he moved to Dacca (as it was spelt then) and got admission in the Government College of Arts and Crafts, where he had the privilege of learning from two eminent artists, Mohammed Kibria and Abdur Razaq. It was, however, the principal of the institution, the world-famous artist Zainul Abedin, who proved to be a lifelong source of inspiration to Rahi.
Meet Mansoor Rahi and Hajra Mansoor, the first artist couple of Pakistan’s art scene
He met Hajra in the late ’60s when he had come to Karachi for settling down, where he had found greater scope for making use of his talents than in Dhaka. The Zuberi sisters — as Hajra and her elder sister Rabia were known — had migrated from Lucknow where they had graduated in visual arts. Hajra had specialised in fine art, while Rabia had sculpture as her speciality. They were in the process of setting up an art school in Nazimabad — a middle-class locality that emerged after Partition — when they met Rahi in whom they found a gifted teacher and a competent administrator, which is how he became the principal of the Karachi School of Art.