Memoirs (2018), Aisha Abid Hussain
The past is never a self-contained entity, something that we can study with scientific curiosity alone and then slide a stone slab over. It continues to shape and influence our lives and is fluid and indomitable, like an intent that cannot be thwarted, a memory that persists. The Lahore Biennale 01 took the visitors to a number of historical sites but one of the exhibitions that prompted the keenest, most comprehensive engagement with the past was a collaborative show titled, I, too, am a part of this history, held at the Faqir Khana Museum in the old city of Lahore.
Curated by Zahra Khan, the group exhibition was conceived as a means for 24 Pakistani visual artists to examine their relationships with their collective past and make works in response to this dialogue. With its troves of miniature paintings, textiles and carpets, coins and manuscripts, and pottery and other artefacts dating largely from the 18th to the 20th century, the Faqir Khana Museum is like an illustrated volume of some of the most eventful chapters of the history of the subcontinent. Its collections come from a period which saw the drawn-out crumbling of the Mughal dynasty, the rise of the Sikh Empire and the growing dominion of the East India Company in the region.
In accordance with the fateful machinations and changing allegiances of the period, many objects in the museum have dark, rich tales of intrigue behind them. There are valuables that have passed hands and crossed frontiers in secrecy, as anyone from the Fakir family would love to tell you. Stories abound, corroborated by a frayed shawl or a miniscule copy of a scripture or a small, alert portrait. Contrarily, some items have lacunas in their stories, inviting freer speculation and fancy. It is a fertile space where fact and fiction absorb and feed each other.
At Lahore’s Fakir Khana Museum, a collaborative group exhibition gave artists a chance to explore their history in relation to their present
In keeping with this spirit of amalgamation or bricolage, Aakif Suri contributed to the show a large, undulating sculpture — made of wooden legs and pegs — that hung like a skeletal banner in the courtyard of the haveli. Evoking the osteological displays of natural history museums but, in fact, crafted with the posts of the kind of wooden furniture that is produced locally, the sculpture could be read as a subtle reminder of the dangers of single-sourced or hegemonic historical narratives. It could also, on the other hand, be interpreted as a nod to the resilience of traditional modes of artistic production. Link by link, vertebra by vertebra, they form the backbone of our visual culture.