EXHIBITION: ART AND INTROSPECTION
Thirteen artists, with as many individual expressions, conform to Sherbano Hussain’s simple curatorial brief of looking within to express their inner voices and concerns rather than taking inspiration from the outside world.
The fun is in reading and understanding how these different artists articulate a single principle within the varied fields of their art practices. A mix of senior, mid-career and junior participating artists adds to the assortment in terms of content, technique and isms.
Relying heavily on the assets that printmaking provides, Afshar Malik’s ‘automatism’ — or spontaneous writing, painting and drawing — always pulses to his inner rhythms. The enamel paint on paperwork, ‘Snow Wind And Twister’, carries his characteristic free association of images and words.
The show Inside Out uses the outer manifestation of inner states as its premise
On the other hand, Anwer Saeed’s compositions are complex narratives coded with symbols but decidedly structured and figurative. Vocal about gender sensitivities, Saeed interprets dreams as conduits for unspoken feelings and desires.
The show’s curator, Hussain, also processes her inner reality through dreamscapes but it’s landscapes, simulacra, preconceptions and memories that influence her pictorial montages. Inventive use of mix media, a vibrant palette and images sourcing art history, politics and mass media make her works striking and intelligible.
Two chromogenic prints by Aasim Akhtar, digitally transferred to archival canvas, capture the human body in a state of undressing, and the act of inhaling and exhaling. He employs the skin as an interface for these physical enactments, to create a sense of ‘reveal’ and ‘conceal’ between inside and out.
Another direct illustration of interior and exterior is Ilona Yousuf’s etching titled ‘Chambers Of The Rose.’ She portrays a floral swirl of outer petals emerging from a layered inner cavity.
Ahmed Ali Manganhar has always utilised memories as a primary vehicle of excavating and exploring the past in order to situate himself in the present. His paintings are a meld of his childhood association with billboards, posters and recollections of Pakistani cinema, European art history imagery and his own religious and political beliefs. This context enables easy reading of the inner world whilc he has processed from external stimuli in ‘Theatre Of Memories’ and ‘Cezanne’s Fermenting Apples 2019.’