POETRY: YEARNING TO FLY
A creative genius is a rare thing. Multi-talented and multi-dimensional artists are even harder to come by. There are plenty excelling in one creative genre or the other. For example, one may be great poet, but come a cropper in writing prose. A brilliant painter may be a wizard on canvas but cut a sorry figure in composing poetry, and so on and so forth. But how would you describe, or classify, one equally at home in poetry, prose and visual art? You’d be compelled to call such a creative person a celebrity of sorts. Someone versatile.
Parvin Shere is versatile; equally and comfortably at home in poetry, prose, painting and even music — she is an accomplished sitar player capable of lighting up the ambience around her with a lilting rendition on the instrument. However, Shere’s principal claim to fame is her art of blending poetic creations with their visual renditions on canvas. She started this experiment more than a decade ago and has since come up with three coffee-table sized publications. She added another dimension to this blend by getting her Urdu poetry translated into English, thus making it truly three-dimensional and enlarging the readership of her works to include those not familiar with Urdu, including a considerable crop of our own Urdu-deficit and English-savvy Anglophiles. The success of her experiment can be measured by the recognition and deserving accolades she has received from around the world.
Shere expands the horizons of the creative arts by dovetailing one into another. It’s quite a novel experiment to reproduce on canvas, with a few strokes of her brush, what took a litany of words, similes and metaphors in poetic rendition to convey its full sense to the viewer.
A fourth coffee-table book by an artist equally at home in poetry, prose, painting and music is deeply marked with a pathos not encountered in her earlier works
But Shere’s mode of experimentation doesn’t just confine itself to the form or format of her creative work. She seems instinctively committed to adding more substance and depth — more romanticism, greater pathos and a more concerted quest for life’s ultimate reality and truth — to her work, both meaningfully and artistically, as she journeys ahead in search of excellence. As one commentator of her works says, her “paintings aren’t just the literal, realistically rendered scenes. They are about crying out loudly or triumphantly, emotion-longing, wonder, thought, hurt, nothingness and hope.”
Boundless —Shere’s fourth coffee-table book — is the latest collection of her mosaic of poetry and painting. But no serious reader of her work can fail to notice that her latest tryst with her novel mode of multi-faceted artistry is deeply marked with a pathos not encountered in her earlier works. Those who know Shere both as an artist and as a person — and this reviewer is one of those — can instantly understand the cause of her deepening gloom. Shere lost, not too long ago, her life partner and mentor, Waris Shere. Waris was much more than a husband in the traditional sense of the term. He was the ballast of her ship of creativity and had stood by her, firm and unshakable like a rock defying angry waves from reaching the shore. All through her years of growth as an artist, Waris was the man standing behind a successful woman and defied conventions as well as conventional wisdom to mentor her rise to fame and fortune.