Encouraged to draw at tender age, Tashfeen Majeed Joseph remembers playing with colours and making basic drawings on floor with using crayons and charcoal. A promising painter and sculptor, he was born in Faisalabad to an artist and political activist, Majeed Joseph who was associated with Pakistan Mazdoor Kissan Party. Having an aptitude to draw, Tashfeen would win poster competitions in school which was quiet heartening for a young artist.
“My father wanted me to study arts at the Moscow University but after the fall of Soviet Union it was impossible so he made a plan to send the National College of Arts (NCA), Lahore. But I was practising freehand drawing to qualify for admission to the arts college when my father died in 2002 and money he had saved in a money box for my admission was spent on his funeral,” said Tashfeen while talking fondly of his late father.
He was the only son of my father with a big family to feed and his father’s untimely death left him with no option but to work as a daily-wage labourer to earn for living.
While loading and unloading merchandise on trucks, the young Tashfeen forgot all his dreams to pursue the career as an artist but the passion to draw kept was there and he would make cartoons for local newspapers during free time.
Financial conditions of his family got better after his mother received the gratuity and pension of his deceased father. Tashfeen got admission to the newly-formed department of fine arts at the Government College University Faisalabad from where he earned a BFA in painting.
“My mother was fighting a legal battle to secure her right to possess the residence allotted to my father. To settle the score, the opponents attacked the house and put it on fire. It was a trauma that we faced and all my research work and paintings were damaged by the fire,” he recalls in a bitter tone.