EXHIBITION: FABLES FROM A DYSTOPIAN WORLD
In ancient Egypt, the “Ba” or an individual’s personality was depicted in the form of a bird with a human head. This mythical bird had the ability to travel between life and afterlife. Such was its power and potency that, in other ancient cultures and civilisations, mythical birds came to represent spirituality, resurrection and even auspiciousness. E.H. Aitken, an Anglo-Indian writer of natural history could barely contain his excitement as he ascribed human qualities to birds, when he wrote in The Naturalist on the Prowl, “You may live in the same garden with a little bird and meet it many times a day, and never know that it is married and has a family.”
Modernity has changed the way we experience and reference animals and birds now. The wonder and veneration accorded to birds and animals in nature has waned away. We are teetering between warnings raised by environmentalists about ecological imbalances and the extinction of various natural species. Artists, too, are attempting to respond to this new, albeit bleak, worldview in their own way.
A recent show at O Art Space in Lahore, titled Wondering Birds and featuring sculptures and paintings by British-Irani artist Dr Mohsen Keiany ,explores the depiction of nature in our apocalyptic times. Dr Keiany has already exhibited these works at the Karachi Beinnale held recently this year.
What would birds look like in a dystopian world? How would our imagination recall them in a world devoid of nature? The artist has painstakingly constructed the sculptural forms of various bird species from junk and scrap metal. Sixteen sculptures, in varying shapes and sizes, engage the viewer in the gallery space. Nuts, bolts, ageing rivets, metal knives and corroding beaks made of scissors are all painstakingly welded to construct the anatomy of different birds. The study is meticulous, with bird feathers transplanted by the tactile, cold and hard surface of various machine forms. His paintings, executed in the colours of rust, patina and ageing metallic tones, contain similar images of birds that resemble machines.
British-Irani artist Mohsen Keiany explores the depiction of nature in apocalyptic times
In his artist’s statement, Dr Keiany bemoans the loss of nature in his village which has become a town infested with litter and invaded by technology. He associates birds with spirituality, fables and stories, such as The Conference of Birds.