Category Archives: art

Josiah Wedgwood and the Melancholy of Mechanized Perfection

**Melancholy Wedgwood**
*By Iris Moon*
*The MIT Press, 248 Pages*

Josiah Wedgwood (1730-95), renowned for his ceramics, created a neoclassical body of work that catered to a commodity culture eager for new pottery and stoneware. His creations bore the look of antiquity even as England’s industrial output accelerated and the very meaning of labor transformed within the factory — a hub of entrepreneurial innovation.

Iris Moon calls her book an “experimental biography.” She deliberately avoids a chronological narrative, which she believes only serves to enhance the mythology of progress associated with the Industrial Revolution. This era, in her view, left behind mountains of wasted materials and lives amid the dynamic of capitalists like Wedgwood, who were determined to invent at any cost—to themselves, their families, and their employees. Their goal was to craft useful and often beautiful objects that glorified households and symbolized the rise of modern business, a rise deeply intertwined with the expansion of empire.

Moon focuses on a biographical fact often mentioned but seldom examined in Wedgwood’s biographies: after he lost a leg, he could no longer sit at the pottery wheel. The amputation, though grievous, relieved him of painful suffering. He recovered well but rarely spoke of his disability, and no images from his native country ever depict him with it. If Wedgwood suffered from melancholy, no biographer has definitively established this.

Yet that does not deter Moon. She notes that melancholy has long been part of the fabric of English life, dating back to Robert Burton’s *Anatomy of Melancholy* (1621). To understand how Burton inspired Moon to offer a fresh, contrarian view of Wedgwood’s life and work, the full title of Burton’s masterpiece is worth citing:

*”What it is: With all the kinds, Causes, Symptomes, Prognostickes, and Several Cures of it. In Three Main Partitions with their several Sections, Members, and Subsections. Philosophically, Medicinally, Historically, Opened and Cut Up.”*

What Burton does for melancholy, Moon does for Wedgwood. She suggests that losing a limb exposed him to a fragmented, dismembered world—one that he sought to reunite through the numerous vases, urns, and vessels shaped by countless failed experiments fired in the intense heat of his factory. Moon even found the rubble of these experiments on a recent visit to England.

Essentially, she argues that Wedgwood’s relentless efforts to reconstitute the classical world in ceramic form parallel, if not stem from, his experience of bodily loss. Crafting ceramic figures was a means of reconstructing himself. Through inventing industrial processes that, despite continual failures, culminated in the discovery of his prized pale blue jasperware—coveted to this day for a color purity rivaled only by the stars—Wedgwood achieved a form of personal and artistic rebirth.

Reading Moon’s interpretation of what Wedgwood’s works signify often reveals meanings far beyond their original intent. It is a philosophical, historical, and medical operation reminiscent of Burton’s own, which dissects and opens up a primal response to melancholy beneath the glossy patina of Wedgwood’s prized pottery.

Wedgwood was a man of tremendous energy who never seemed to pause and reflect on the origins of his manic activity. Moon takes up that task for him—slowing down the manufacturing process, turning Wedgwood over in her mind repeatedly, and uncovering new meanings in old objects or in new objects fashioned to look old.

Biographers often consider their subject’s children to evaluate the legacy left for posterity. In Wedgwood’s case, none of his children showed much interest in their inheritance or managed to sustain the founder’s business. An especially melancholy figure among them was Wedgwood’s son, Tom, who was sickly from birth and never regained his health.

Tom’s story is a poignant coda to the Wedgwood generation. Unlike his father, who staved off despair through incessant labor, Tom had time to contemplate his ailments. He possessed the intelligence to nearly invent photography before Henry Fox Talbot but failed to bring his experiments to the point of scientific proof. His curious story adds a layer of tragic reflection on the costs of the Wedgwood legacy—a generation with too much time on its hands.

*Mr. Rollyson is the author of* *A Higher Form of Cannibalism? Adventures in the Art and Politics of Biography.*
https://www.nysun.com/article/josiah-wedgwood-and-the-melancholy-of-mechanized-perfection

A Mosaic Elk at Prairie Creek

Those who wander into the Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park Visitor Center are in for a unique encounter—not with a live Roosevelt elk, as typically found in nearby Elk Prairie, but with a remarkable glass-encrusted bull elk sculpture created by Jennifer a’Midi, a local Southern Humboldt mosaic artist.

Weighing 225 pounds and life-sized, the Roosevelt elk sculpture features museum-quality antlers and is covered from head to tail with thousands of hand-cut pieces of glass. These glass pieces form an intricate mosaic depicting scenes of 138 unique habitat types, along with local plants, animals, and fungi, including seven banana slugs and a California Condor.

“Redwood National and State Parks is honored to host a’Midi’s custom-made artwork, and we are thrilled to connect visitors to creative experiences in the parks, which provide inspiration and connection to nature,” said Shelana deSilva, Deputy District Superintendent, during the sculpture’s unveiling on September 13.

The Yurok Tribal Council will soon vote on a Yurok name for the mosaic elk, which State Parks will then feature on an accompanying plaque. The unveiling event, hosted by California State Parks North Coast Redwoods, Redwood Parks Conservancy, and Redwood National and State Parks, concluded with a scavenger hunt for 22 of a’Midi’s mosaic rocks.

This Prairie Creek mosaic elk is the fourth mosaic art sculpture that a’Midi has gifted to a North Coast Redwoods District Park unit. In 2023, she donated her “Mushroom Connection” mosaic, featuring mushrooms and a river scene with otters and salmonids, to the historic Richardson Grove Lodge during Richardson Grove State Park’s Centennial celebration. That same year, she gifted a mosaic otter named “Tce yac” to the Humboldt Redwoods State Park Visitor Center.

More recently, in 2024, a’Midi presented her giant mushroom mosaic titled “Midnight”—named after the fungi Entoloma medianoxa—to the Grizzly Creek Redwoods State Park Visitor Center.

When asked what motivates her to create these painstaking mosaic works and generously donate them to local California State Parks, a’Midi shared, “I have a deep passion for the redwoods and protecting them, so I share my art with the public to hopefully inspire conservation and protection of our forests and all the creatures within.”

She added a favorite quote from Pablo Picasso: “The meaning of life is to find your gift. The purpose of life is to give it away.”

After completing the mosaic for Grizzly Creek State Park, a’Midi felt inspired to create mosaic pieces for as many visitor centers as she could. “Every time I’ve visited Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, I see the beautiful elk, so I proposed gifting a mosaic elk to State Parks District Superintendent Victor Bjelajac, and he approved my idea,” she said.

“Jennifer’s attention to detail and species representation is spectacular in her art, and she’s performing a public service at our visitor centers with her donations,” Bjelajac commented.

To begin the project, a’Midi ordered a museum-quality fiberglass and resin sculpture from Texas, then carefully selected scenes from California’s North Coast to incorporate. “I love to draw, so I created a Prairie Side and an Ocean Side scene on each side of the elk to represent Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park,” she explained.

She enjoyed researching the flora, fauna, and fungi native to the Prairie Creek area, choosing those she could depict recognizably in mosaic. The California Condor holds special significance for her, as she has followed their restoration efforts through the Yurok Tribe’s work. “It’s amazing, and I wanted to honor that work,” she said.

“I hope Prairie Creek visitors will be inspired when they see my mosaic elk—and I hope they can find all seven banana slugs hidden within the artwork,” a’Midi shared.

Regarding the biggest challenge in making life forms recognizable in mosaic, a’Midi noted, “Covering any 3D object with flat pieces of glass is a challenge. Curved surfaces require smaller cuts so the glass lays as flat as possible. Small crevices are difficult to get the glass into. Grouting is the most physical part. The best moment was wiping the grout off and seeing my vision become this amazing creation.”

The project took just over a year to complete. “I’m not sure about the total hours, but I worked on it every day, or was researching or engineering it.”

The finished mosaic elk, dubbed the “Great Elk Migration,” required six people to carry it out of a’Midi’s home to a waiting trailer. A convoy of four vehicles then followed the sculpture north to the Prairie Creek Visitor Center, where it was installed indoors in its permanent, protected location.

Looking ahead, a’Midi revealed that her next mosaic animal project will be a black bear for Sue-meg State Park Visitor Center (formerly Patrick’s Point State Park). Bjelajac joked that after completing her mosaic bear, a’Midi would have “only 275 more California State Parks to go.”

Mark Larson (he/him) is a retired Cal Poly Humboldt journalism professor and active freelance photographer who enjoys walking.
https://www.northcoastjournal.com/arts-scene/art-beat/a-mosaic-elk-at-prairie-creek/

日本と似たところもある 「オスマン帝国の肖像-絵画で読む六〇〇年史」を出版した九州大准教授 小笠原弘幸さん

文化 日本と似たところもある

「オスマン帝国の肖像-絵画で読む六〇〇年史」を出版した九州大准教授 小笠原弘幸さん

2025年10月14日 14:30 [有料会員限定記事]

記者一覧:古賀 英毅

※フォロー機能は有料会員の方のみお使いいただけます。

西日本新聞meとは?

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※クリップ機能は有料会員の方のみお使いいただけます。

西日本新聞meとは?


九州大学准教授の小笠原弘幸さんは、13世紀末から20世紀初頭まで栄えたオスマン帝国の歴史を絵画を通じて叙述する著書、「オスマン帝国の肖像-絵画で読む六〇〇年史」を出版しました。

この記事は有料会員限定です。残り731文字。7日間無料トライアルで1日37円から読み放題。年払いならさらにお得です。

https://www.nishinippon.co.jp/item/1410929/

ホンモノ見極め「神級」目指せ! キボリノコンノ展に行ってきた【ガクミカ取材班】

はじめまして、ガクミカ取材班の学生記者で大学2年生の「にし」です!今回は、木彫りで本物そっくりの作品を生み出すアーティスト、キボリノコンノさんの作品展「食べたい!木彫りアートの世界」に行ってきました。

身近な食べ物や日用品がリアルに再現されたアート展で、会場は福岡市科学館です。「ひらめく」「まねる」「うつす」など複数のブースに分かれていて、順番に回れるようになっています。各ブースにはテーマに沿った作品が展示されていて、中には横からよーく目を凝らすと木の痕跡が見えるものもあります。作者の工夫を発見するのも、この展覧会の楽しみ方のひとつです。

「まねる」のコーナーで待ち構えているのは、あの有名なお菓子たち!3時のおやつが全部、木でできているのです。かわいらしいコアラのマーチのデザインや、マルセイバターサンドの銀・赤・黄色の特徴的なパッケージも細かく再現されています。他にもたくさんの定番おやつが展示されているので、お気に入りをぜひ見つけてみてくださいね。

最後に待ち構えているのは「きぼりはどっち?」のコーナーです。本物?それとも木彫り作品?正解を見分けて、全問パーフェクト解答者に与えられる「神級(かみきゅう)」の称号をかけた闘いが始まります。

私は、100個もあるナッツたちをじっくり観察しました。これが怪しい!と思うと、他のものも怪しく見えてきてしまい、心を抑えながら答え合わせに向かいました。結果は、1問だけ不正解。しかし「達人級」の称号を得られて大満足です!皆さんも「神級」を目指してぜひ挑戦してみてくださいね。

そんなわくわくの体験の中、展示作品の上をふと見ると、キボリノコンノさんの制作風景の写真が並んでいました。彫刻刀や絵の具などさまざまな道具を使い分けながら、真剣に制作に向き合っている姿がうかがえます。

キボリノコンノさんは、木の質感に似ていると思い「木彫りのコーヒー豆」を作りSNSに投稿したことがきっかけで、コロナ禍で失われていた「人とのつながり」を感じたそうです。

見る人の「わくわく」を大切にしている思いが、作品全体を通して伝わってきました。楽しませる工夫が散りばめられた「キボリノコンノ展」。ぜひ会場に足を運んで、キボリノコンノさんの「ひらめき」から「わくわく」を体験してみてください!

最後までお読みいただき、ありがとうございました。
https://www.nishinippon.co.jp/item/1406588/

Chanel’s New Orbit

At the Grand Palais in Paris, Matthieu Blazy presented his debut collection for the House of Chanel in a show that balanced grandeur with restraint. The space, once home to Karl Lagerfeld’s elaborate sets, became a planetarium filled with glowing orbs. This setting echoed Blazy’s direction for Chanel, now entering a new era under its fourth creative director in 115 years.

Among those in attendance were stars including Nicole Kidman, the new brand ambassador, who was joined by her daughters, along with Margot Robbie, Penélope Cruz, Ayo Edebiri, Pedro Pascal, Tilda Swinton, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Blazy built the collection around duality. “She decided for herself what she could be, and she could be both faces of the same coin,” he said after the show, referring to founder Coco Chanel. The collection reflected that tension between structure and sensuality, intimacy and confidence.

Texture led the narrative. Fabrics appeared almost tangible, drawing the eye to their depth and finish. Colours were rich and concentrated, with red appearing in sequinned co-ords, ruffled skirts, and sharp tweed separates. Eveningwear remained in shades of ivory, beige, and black, echoing Paris’s celebration of a century of Art Deco.

Gold wheat motifs, one of Coco Chanel’s personal symbols, featured on tweed coats and sack dresses, while knits and tweeds were dense and fringed. With tweed, some suits had low-slung wrap skirts, while others were puffed or frayed. The focus was attitude. “There are Chanel women all around the world,” Blazy said.

Accessories followed the same principle. The classic bag appeared without its chain, while new bags were introduced in the collection, including egg-shaped clutches, small top-handles, and soft carryalls in supple leather.

“There was too much beauty. The good thing with the codes of Chanel is you can reduce them. They still look like Chanel,” Blazy said.

The message was clear: Chanel’s next phase will move with the world and speak to many cultures. “Fashion should be beautiful and enjoyable,” he added.

Blazy’s Chanel honours the house’s heritage while pushing it forward. He has brought Chanel back to its core.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1350285-chanels-new-orbit

Chanel’s New Orbit

At the Grand Palais in Paris, Matthieu Blazy presented his debut collection for the House of Chanel in a show that balanced grandeur with restraint. The iconic space, once home to Karl Lagerfeld’s elaborate sets, was transformed into a planetarium filled with glowing orbs. This setting echoed Blazy’s fresh direction for Chanel, now entering a new era under its fourth creative director in 115 years.

Among those attending the show were stars including Nicole Kidman, the new brand ambassador, who appeared alongside her daughters. Also present were Margot Robbie, Penélope Cruz, Ayo Edebiri, Pedro Pascal, Tilda Swinton, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Blazy built the collection around the concept of duality. “She decided for herself what she could be, and she could be both faces of the same coin,” he said after the show, referring to founder Coco Chanel. The collection reflected this tension between structure and sensuality, intimacy and confidence.

Texture led the narrative throughout the pieces. Fabrics appeared almost tangible, drawing the eye with their depth and finish. Colors were rich and concentrated, with vibrant red making an appearance in sequined co-ords, ruffled skirts, and sharp tweed separates. Eveningwear stayed in elegant shades of ivory, beige, and black—colors that echoed Paris’s celebration of a century of Art Deco.

Gold wheat motifs, one of Coco Chanel’s personal symbols, were featured prominently on tweed coats and sack dresses. Knits and tweeds were dense and fringed, with some suits offering low-slung wrap skirts while others were puffed or frayed.

The focus was attitude. “There are Chanel women all around the world,” Blazy said. Accessories followed this same principle. The classic Chanel bag appeared without its signature chain, while new bags were introduced, including egg-shaped clutches, small top-handles, and soft carryalls crafted in supple leather.

“There was too much beauty. The good thing with the codes of Chanel is you can reduce them. They still look like Chanel,” Blazy explained. The message was clear: Chanel’s next phase will move with the world and resonate across many cultures. “Fashion should be beautiful and enjoyable,” he added.

Blazy’s Chanel honours the house’s rich heritage while boldly pushing it forward. With this collection, he has brought Chanel back to its core.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1350285-chanels-new-orbit

Lina Wertmüller: The trailblazer who redefined women in cinema

**Lina Wertmuller: The Trailblazer Who Redefined Women in Cinema**
*By Vinita Jain | Oct 11, 2025, 10:05 AM*

Lina Wertmuller was a trailblazing Italian filmmaker whose works left an indelible mark on the world of cinema. She was the first woman to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Director, breaking new ground in an industry long dominated by men. Known for her bold themes and unique storytelling style, Wertmuller’s influence extended far beyond Italian cinema, impacting Hollywood and filmmakers across the globe.

### Pioneering Female Director

In 1977, Lina Wertmuller became the first woman ever nominated for an Academy Award for Best Director for her film *Seven Beauties*. This historic achievement shattered gender barriers and inspired generations of female filmmakers to pursue their dreams. Her success opened doors for more women to take on directorial roles and challenged the traditional gender norms prevalent in the filmmaking industry.

### Unique Storytelling Techniques

Wertmuller’s films are noted for their unconventional narrative structures and sharp socio-political commentary. She skillfully blended dark humor with serious themes, crafting a distinctive style that captivated audiences worldwide. Her ability to address complex issues through engaging and innovative storytelling set her apart from her contemporaries and influenced many future directors seeking fresh ways to tell their stories.

### Impact on International Cinema

Wertmuller’s influence went well beyond Italy. Her films received critical acclaim and won awards at prestigious international film festivals, earning her widespread recognition. Directors from diverse cultural backgrounds have cited her as an inspiration, underscoring her global impact on cinema and storytelling.

### A Lasting Legacy

Decades after her most celebrated works, Lina Wertmuller’s legacy continues to inspire new generations of filmmakers. Her bold approach to filmmaking and fearless storytelling remain studied in film schools worldwide as part of cinematic history courses. Through these efforts, future artists will remember and build upon the pioneering contributions of this legendary director.

Lina Wertmuller’s trailblazing journey reshaped the role of women in cinema and left an enduring imprint on the art of filmmaking globally.
https://www.newsbytesapp.com/news/entertainment/lina-wertm-ller-s-impact-on-hollywood-cinema/story

どっちが木彫りなんだ!? キボリノコンノ展に行ってみた【ガクミカ取材班】

はじめまして。ガクミカ取材班の学生記者で、福岡女子大学の「ともみ」です!

突然ですが、「アート展」と聞くと、どのように感じますか?静かな空間で、訪れた人が黙々と展示物を見て、作者の意図を感じようとする……私はそんな、少しハードルが高いものだと考えていました。

ところが、福岡市科学館で開催中の「キボリノコンノ展 食べたい!木彫りアートの世界」は、あっと驚く作品ばかり。誰かについ話したくなる、そんなアート展でした!

## 木彫りで本物そっくりの作品を生み出すアーティスト「キボリノコンノ」さんの作品展

さっそく、会場の様子をご紹介します。

最初に目に入ったのは、大きなポスターの横にある木彫りのチーズトーストです。特にチーズの伸びている部分には驚かされました! 表から見ると薄く見えますが、実は2センチもの厚さがあるんです。

伸びている部分にはグレーの絵の具を塗ることで、表面からは薄く見せる工夫がされています。木彫りの技術はもちろんですが、色の塗り方までこだわられていて、この展覧会に一気に引き込まれました。

## 撮影自由で楽しさアップ! 写真の撮り方のコツも紹介

展覧会といえば「撮影禁止」が多いですが、ここでは自由に写真を撮ってもOK。さらに、よりリアルに見える撮り方のコツまで掲示されていて、楽しさが倍増します。

写真があまり得意でない私でも、うまく撮ることができました。中でも印象的だったのは、木の板の上にある生卵。目の前で見ても、自分で撮った写真で見返しても、あまりのリアルさに感動しました!

家に帰ってからも写真を見返して楽しめるアート展って、素敵ですよね。

## 「きぼりはどっち?」で挑戦! 本物と木彫りの見分けクイズ

私が最も時間をかけて楽しんだのは、「きぼりはどっち?」というコーナー。ここでは、本物と木彫りが並んでいて、どちらが木彫りか当てるブースです。

これが本当に難しく、12問中4問は間違えてしまいました。例えば、19粒のコーヒー豆の中から木彫りの1粒を見つける問題がありました。こんなにもコーヒー豆と向き合ったのは初めての経験です!

軟らかそうに見えるのに触ると木の硬い感触だったり、本物の食べ物と見比べたりと、暮らしに身近なものが木彫りの作品になっている不思議さに、わくわくさせられました。

## 気軽に楽しめる新しいアート体験

「アート展」と聞くと、落ち着いた雰囲気で、美術に精通していないと楽しめないのでは?と思っていた私。

しかし「キボリノコンノ展」では、あまり難しいことを考えずに、作品を見る・触る・間違いを探すといった体験を通じて、作者の世界観を味わうことができました。

ひとりでじっくり楽しむのもよし、家族や友人と一緒に見るのもよし。後から写真を見返して誰かに共有するのもよし。いろいろな楽しみ方ができると思います!

## 開催情報

「キボリノコンノ展 食べたい!木彫りアートの世界」は、2025年11月9日まで福岡市科学館で開催されています。ぜひ足を運んでみてはいかがでしょうか。

最後まで読んでいただき、ありがとうございました!
https://www.nishinippon.co.jp/item/1406559/

Viewers as curators

Curators are sprouting like weeds in Pakistan’s art world. A gallery manager, a recent graduate, a mid-career practitioner, an art teacher, an eager writer—even an occasional collector—can suddenly transform into a curator. Most of them are temporary or amateur. These days, it is rare to receive an exhibition invitation that does not bear a curator’s name.

A curator cannot be easily compared with another, but the rise of this title has made the public acknowledge and respect the role of those who are neither makers, buyers, nor gallery owners, but mediators guiding viewers to look at the work (not always new) through a different lens.

What happens when viewers themselves become curators, finding links in the work on display? It is like connecting dots to form a coherent picture: a challenging task, but a rewarding one, leaving behind a sense of achievement. Unaware of how viewers may respond, the designer of the puzzle allows for multiple possibilities. The work is open to anyone who engages and interprets.

A similar experience could be found at *The Shape of Seeing*, curated by Ammar Aziz. The exhibition, held from September 20 to October 5, also marked the opening of ZQ Gallery, a new space in Lahore. Not only because of its location—a narrow street lined with small houses, luxury car showrooms, and lanes of automobile workshops—but also because of the group of artists chosen for its inaugural show, the exhibition has surprised spectators.

Names not usually seen together on a single list appear side by side. The work varies in content, date, technique, medium, genre, and scale. Adding further to the diversity, some are internationally acclaimed figures, while others are relatively unknown or less widely circulated. In that sense, the exhibition lives up to its title, *The Shape of Seeing*.

It offers a rare chance to view art in a hybrid setting: a residential-type space adjoining a white cube gallery. This blend, perhaps born of practical necessity, also raises questions about the disjunction between art created in a studio, displayed in a gallery, and ultimately housed in a corporate building or grand residence.

Some of the work in the show actively responds to the surroundings. Masooma Syed’s *Leaning Shadows*, for instance, occupies a corner that amplifies the lustrous presence of her chandelier-like suspended sculpture. Similarly, Hamra Abbass’ small, minimal marble relief is set in a dimly lit, intimate space, heightening its quiet impact.

In terms of thematic connection, the exhibition invites viewers to search for their own clues; each individual, one assumes, constructs a personal version. Yet a common thread runs through the work. Risham Hosain Syed’s *Texts and Contexts* series from 1996 (painted at the Royal College of Art, London) sits alongside Ayaz Jokhio’s cubit titled *Mugshots* (2024, Back to Basic, Articulate Studios, Lahore), which depicts the unfolding sides of an ordinary teacup.

These are displayed next to Ali Kazim’s two delicate dry pigments on mylar: *Untitled (Cloud Series)* and *Untitled (Lightning Series)*, both from 2019, and Anwar Saeed’s emotive digital piece *Undie ID* (2012). Together, they affirm the timelessness of art.

Read one way, the inaugural show at ZQ Gallery (part of the Zeenat Qureshi Institute of Digital and Regional Arts and Culture) seems to aim at transcending the limitations of time, while also discarding the conventional classification of artists by style, status, or stance.

This is reinforced by the presence of two artworks by Masooma Syed. One is an installation fashioned from old glassware, bottles, beads, chandelier parts, an iron frame, and warm lights. Nearby hangs her large mixed-media work on paper, created primarily with Indian newspapers, its strokes suggesting a European couple rendered in the colonial period. This echo of history is also present in Risham Hosain Syed’s diptych: one panel patterned with the motif of disappearing Victorian lace, the other containing a small but insistent frame within a frame, depicting two men on a motorbike looking at the roadside aftermath of a political protest—a crossroads of vernacular setting and imported turmoil.

Curators are sprouting like weeds in Pakistan’s art world. Those who are neither makers nor buyers nor gallery owners are guiding viewers to look at the work through a different lens.

The presence of the indigenous feels most evident in the exhibits grouped together as *The Shape of Seeing*, even if neither the makers nor, perhaps, the curator consciously intended it. In their materials, concerns, imagery, and issues, many of the artworks seem to narrate the stories of this land. Yet these are not tales buried in the cellars of the soil; rather, they remain in dialogue with narratives from across the world, contributing to an inclusive, diverse, and expansive human account of experiences and emotions.

Consider *Kalila wa-Dimna*, a collection of fables whose animal protagonists trace their origins to the Panchatantra, yet whose content also echoes in Aesop’s fables and, centuries later, in twentieth-century cartoons: Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse, Universal’s Woody Woodpecker, MGM’s Tom and Jerry, and a long line of other animated characters. Where or when a story began, or how it continues to be retold, matters less. Creative overlaps demonstrate how artistic expressions stick to one another, often without the intention or awareness of their makers.

In this light, Ali Kazim’s brooding skies with a solitary cloud or streak of lightning; Muhammad Ashraf’s scar-like, red impasto surfaces; Imran Ahmed Khan’s paintings and sculptures inspired by the Indus Valley Civilisation, particularly Mehrgarh; and Hamra Abbass’ *Waterfall Drawings*, born of her intensive research into Mughal pietra dura motifs and transformed into a language of geometry and modern art—all point back to this land, its history, its climate, and its shifting realities.

Geography is never complete without its inhabitants. The two often intermingle, as can be seen in the work of Sajjad Ahmed, Shahid Mirza, and Sumera Jawad. Many other artists too have drawn attention to the plight of people trapped in their environment—a community struggling to negotiate questions of identity, individual choice, gender preference, and psychological pressure, perhaps all intertwined.

Anwar Saeed and Mohsin Shafi, in their imagery, explore society’s fixation with the body; its paranoia over power; and its perverse pleasure in subjugation. Rabeya Jalil’s jittery lines, seismic marks, and impulsive layers of paint respond to these very pressures. They suggest how external forces compel human beings to act in prescribed ways: what begins in anguish eventually hardens into habit, even into pleasure, until the two opposing sensations become indistinguishable.

In Jalil’s paintings, the misery of her characters is rendered with an almost playful delight. The scenario is grasped at first glance, yet its echoes can be traced, in different forms, throughout the other works in the exhibition.

In truth, this is the leitmotif of art in our present place and time. Whether one exhibition presents a clear curatorial vision or another appears indifferent to such agendas, both reflect the same reality. They are two sides of the same coin—the currency of art in Pakistan, and perhaps beyond.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1348308-viewers-as-curators

Qatar to honour MF Husain with dedicated museum opening next month

A museum dedicated to the life and work of M.F. Husain, one of the most influential figures in the history of modern art, will open in Doha, Qatar, next month. The museum, Lawh Wa Qalam: M.F. Husain Museum, is set to welcome the public on November 28.

The museum aims to foster creativity and dialogue, serving as a space for inspiration and artistic exploration. “Lawh Wa Qalam: M.F. Husain Museum reflects Qatar Foundation’s dedication to providing spaces for everyone to explore, enjoy, learn from, and be inspired by art and culture,” said Kholoud M. Al-Ali, Executive Director of Community Engagement and Programming at the Doha-based Qatar Foundation.

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https://www.mid-day.com/news/india-news/article/qatar-to-honour-mf-husain-with-dedicated-museum-opening-next-month-23596810