EXHIBITION: IN SEARCH OF MEANING
A recent group show titled An Apology to Shaikh Ayaz, held at the Chawkandi Art Gallery, draws the viewers into conversations between the visual arts and regional literature. The curators, Jamal Ashiqain and Mariam Mushtaq Kazi, set the appropriate tone to the exhibition as an ode to the Sindhi poet. The diversity of the invited artists, both local and international — Agha Jandan, Khuda Baksh Abro, Alia Bilgrami, Khalil Chishtee, Abdul Jabbar Gul, Feica, Meher Afroz, Aqeel Solangi, Dr Mohsin Keiany, Zohra Amarta and Mariam Mushtaq — reflect the all-encompassing nature of the poet’s vision.
Afroz, who interpreted Faiz’s verses in Waadi-i-Sina as a form of marsiya in an earlier series, has used thread to weave patches of gold fabric to refer to Ayaz’s vision of hope.
One is enamoured by the simplicity of Bilgrami’s digital prints that portray a moonlit sky dark enough to lose oneself in. The artist disrupts the ‘perfect’ picture of an atmospheric sky, encircling the moon as if by a marker or white chalk. It is, in a way, related to Ayaz’s search (and hers in turn) asking the moon to guide her/him, in finding the lover. This is derived from Ayaz’s poem Aray Chand, Aray Chand — also sung by the iconic singer Sarmad Sindhi.
The poetry of Shaikh Ayaz inspires local and international painters and sculptors to begin new conversations in the world of art
Solangi’s painting of clouds refers ‘to the night clouds that lift you from one place to another’ and to the chrysanthemum flower, as ‘a symbol of eternity’ as mentioned in Ayaz’s poetry.
The textured sky in Abro’s painting seems to reflect painful journeys, depicting a restless and dark sky in frenzied brush strokes. In between spaces one can view a faint yellow-gold sky. It may be the same reference to light as addressed by Afroz, showing the ability of Ayaz’s poetry to be interpreted on many levels and far beyond constraints of time.