Jamil Naqsh 1939-2019 | Photos by White Star
From pigeons to Picasso, a journey of truly distinctive art-making ceased with the passing of modernist master Jamil Naqsh. Obituaries, acclamations, tributes and personal recollections began pouring in the moment his demise was officially announced on May 16, 2019. As an artist, Naqsh was among the fortunate few who enjoyed success during their lifetimes. For the last few decades, he was widely acclaimed as a living legend and the finer points of his art practice were closely scrutinised and celebrated by way of selected, well-orchestrated exhibitions, collector-variety volumes and commentaries by eminent personalities. But what happens beyond these existing accomplishments and the eulogies that follow?
His museum-worthy art is a national treasure, but a state-sponsored contemporary art repository is not a priority for a country in turmoil. The rise of the private museum entity, the world over, is the way forward today, and The Jamil Naqsh Museum was launched in December 2017 with this ethos in mind. Unlike government-funded museums, the private ventures can take off faster and exercise better control on the quality of exhibits. According to Dr Sethna, trustee of the Naqsh Foundation, “The Jamil Naqsh Museum will hold a great significance for the city of Karachi in coming years. The idea behind setting up a whole museum dedicated to the artist’s work was to provide the younger generation a place which inspires them to do something similar in the field of art.”
“Buy art, build a museum, put your name on it… That’s as close as you can get to immortality,” British artist Damien Hirst once said. Last year, Hirst spent 37.9 million US dollars redeveloping London’s Newport Street Gallery. It is a space that he will use to showcase the more than 3,000 pieces in his own art collection, including works by Francis Bacon, Picasso, Warhol and Koons. For Hirst, this dictum seems to apply even if your creative output has already guaranteed you a spot in the art history books, as stated in The Rise of Private Museums by Sophie Kalle.
Jamil Naqsh gave new shape and brilliance to the art of his times. Startlingly modern and intrinsically traditional, his art romanced the female figure, doves, horses and Arabic calligraphy in a stirring fusion of the physical and the spiritual. As we mourn the passage of this modernist master, we must consider how best we can carry on his legacy
Naqsh will go down in the history books as an artist extraordinaire. Today, the sheer volume, content and quality of his work is such that, in hindsight, he towers over his contemporaries who constituted the modernist era of Pakistani art.
His tryst with tradition and modernity has roots in his ancestral home in Kairana in Uttar Pradesh, India, where he was born in 1939. He grew up in a cultural milieu peculiar to pre-Partition Muslim households where ghazal-goi and Urdu literary baithaks were common, as was the passion for rearing pigeons. Kabootar-baazi has a long and rich history in India. It is said that Shahjahan introduced the tradition when he shifted his capital from Agra to Delhi. The sport continues to flourish and still inspires lyricists. Naqsh romanced the dove as a muse and some of his most lyrical paintings emerged from this love affair. The poetic metaphor of idealised, unrequited love associated with Urdu poetry found contemporary translation in Naqsh’s countless, most endearing paintings of women and pigeons.