NON-FICTION: STAMPING POSTERITY
Artist and designer Adil Salahuddin is fortunate. He is alive. He can read in his lifetime this tribute to his work as an artist and designer par excellence of postage stamps. Titled Message Sent: The Life and Works of Adil Salahuddin — A Legendary Postage Stamp Designer, this sumptuous volume has been compiled by British-Pakistani author Arshi Ahmad-Aziz, who writes corporate histories, and is sponsored by a bank. The book contains a summation of Salahuddin’s educational background, the making of him as an artist, his graduation from an artist to a stamp designer and a collage of the numerous stamps he designed over his 37-year long career with the Pakistan Security Printing Corporation (PSPC). There is also a chapter on conversations with him, tributes from his friends and colleagues and, finally, a survey of Pakistan’s genesis and growth as a nation as seen in its stamps.
I have known Salahuddin since 1966 when he was a student at the National College of Arts (NCA) and I worked in an honorary capacity at the Lahore Museum, cataloguing its superb collection of miniature paintings. The NCA was at that time under the principalship of Professor Shakir Ali, one of Pakistan’s earliest modernist painters. Khalid Iqbal — the artist who gave Punjab’s landscape a new identity — headed the NCA’s department of fine arts. Both men played a seminal influence in transforming Salahuddin into one of the most significant designers of his generation.
In the autumn of 1966, Salahuddin and his batch-mate Muhammad Asif — both lean and wiry — had grown tired of painting the old models hired on its shoestring budget by the NCA. Iqbal approached me and suggested that as I provided a younger face, I might like to sit for these two budding painters. The first portraits they made of me made me look like a wooden mannequin. By the time I quit the museum the following summer, their skills had improved immeasurably. The second portraits they did showed me standing, full-length, with my arms folded across my chest. They submitted these works in their thesis portfolio. I never found out what happened to these paintings. Perhaps they are still buried somewhere in the vaults of the NCA, waiting like some buried Pharaoh to be unearthed.
A sumptuous volume is not only a tribute to a legendary stamp designer, but also a visual chronicle of Pakistan’s history and diversity
Salahuddin graduated. He moved to Karachi and took up employment with the PSPC, a body established by the Government of Pakistan in 1949 to make us independent in our needs for currency and stamps as most countries at the time — certainly those in the British empire — depended for their bank notes and currency on the firm of De La Rue in distant England.
The first adhesive British stamp was issued in 1840. Known as the Penny Black, it featured an image of Queen Victoria against a severe black background (and this was years before she went into mourning after the death of her husband, her beloved Prince Albert). Just over a hundred years later, Pakistan used — as its first stamps after independence — the image of her great-grandson King George VI, over-printed with the proud announcement “Pakistan.”
The first Pakistani stamps (still printed by De La Rue) came out on July 9, 1948. The highest denomination of Rs 1 bore a floral design by the immortal artist Abdur Rahman Chughtai. The lower denominations of three and a half annas depicted the Lahore Fort’s entrance, the one of two and a half annas showed the Stargate at Karachi airport, and the one and a half anna stamp featured the Constituent Building (now the Sindh Assembly Building) in Karachi. (Interestingly, there were none of East Pakistan). The latter three stamps were designed by Rashiduddin and Muhammad Latif.