When an emphatic colourist such as Raza, with a penchant for primary hues like red, blue and yellow, opts for white against black the change is in itself a statement. A picture, in colours, is to be looked at but colours can distract the eye and the mind — black and white forces us to think. Artists choose to use black and white for aesthetic, emotional, and sometimes even for moral reasons. By stripping colour from her paintings Raza has attempted to intensify the reflective demeanour of her subjects. This prompts viewer inquiry into the nature of the hidden truths. Every painting can unfold a story or can be read from the inside out if one cares to engage with it.
Weaving together the discrete materials of her lived experience into her art — as wife, mother, daughter, friend and single parent — Raza has always offered a striking insight into the individual and universal soul of womanhood.
This exhibition is a virtual diary on different aspects of womanhood. A mix of autobiographical, confessional and universally gender-sensitive art — the works are open to several interpretations as per viewer sensibility. The reclusive attitude can indicate a spiritual quietude, it can even denote a world — weary feeling that causes withdrawal, or the artist is just giving form to feeling, no matter how dark, bitter or trivial, for its cathartic value. It can also be just a segment of An Ongoing Journey — a journey of self-knowledge. The onus is on the audience to weave its own narratives.