EXHIBITION: MASKING THE PRESENT
Producing art from a reflection of personal experience is the most sincere form of expression. We can only truly understand what’s happening around us through our own individual encounters, and it is from there that we eventually form thoughts and perceptions of the world. Similarly, the artists participating in the show The Skin We Live In, held at Karachi’s Canvas Gallery recently, produced a series of works that mirrored their particular thoughts about life in a way that resounded with its audience.
The viewer is greeted with a collection of small paintings by Ahmed Manganhar, displayed on a wall in the first room of the gallery. The imagery in his work varies; with scenes of past and present-day Pakistan, it appears as a narrative that maps the artist’s journey. What’s most interesting about the work is the artist’s choice of surface to paint, that is, the chalk slate.
One of the initial (and now practically extinct) tools used for teaching children, the slate is a clear reminder of education, especially to those that have used them.
An exhibition highlights the evolving themes of reality and fiction in everyday scenarios through the works of four artists
Manganhar uses these surfaces as time capsules, capturing moments from his life which are recognisable scenes for most viewers as well and, hence, resonate on a deeper level. The fluidity and transparency in his paint application allows the grey surface of the slate to come through, making his work ghostly. Not only does it capture the moment, but also the tense emotion that accompanies it.