News Desk
KARACHI: Artciti Gallery is organizing an exclusive exhibition of paintings “Epic Mughals” by A. Q. Arif from 12th – 17th March, 2020 at Artciti, 2nd Floor, Plot # 36-C, Bukhari Commercial Lane-13,Khayaban-e-Shujaat, Phase-VI, DHA, Karachi.
The genesis of war is as old as history. Human beings have been fighting for power and supremacy from the moment they began to run out of resources and starve leading to ruthless greed. Today, history is replete with conflicts, battles and wars that were fought for a variety of reasons such as forcing ideological change, settling border disputes, capturing mineral resources among others.
Accentuating the brave nature of defending warriors, A Q Arif has put together a unique set of aesthetically modelled artworks. Additionally, being a highly acknowledged painter of cityscapes and Islamic buildings, the artist in the current exhibits, introduces a new wave of captivating structures draped in Muslim architecture. The segment of paintings depicting the grand era of the Mughals, reflect the artist’s vivid vision, eye for detail and a keen urge to define the atmosphere of combat. The visually complex subject of armed conflicts comprising armor, weapons and dynamic articulation, is a daunting theme that Arif confronts head-on. The historical nature of painted episodes is crucial to the preservation of past history of the subcontinent some grand and some humiliating! The artist indeed has manifested his command over this exclusive subject narrating some of the significant junctures of battle, which now stand preserved. The remarkable demeanor of courage, gracefully composed for movement and posture, these paintings exude inspiration and induce a winning spirit to struggle. The artist, through his extraordinary arrangements on the canvas, has revived the powerful imagery of the region’s ancestors, which oozes with inspiration to fortify defenses of the motherland.
Retrospectively, ever since the Indus Valley Civilization (3300-1300 BC), successive kingdoms and empires invaded and ruled the region and enriched its culture – from the Achaemenid Persian empire, to Alexander the Great. Muslim rule in the subcontinent began in 712 AD when Muhammad bin Qasim conquered Sindh and Multan, setting off several successive invasions leading to the formation of Muslim empires of Delhi Sultanate and the Mughal Empire. It was the Mughal rulers who introduced middle-eastern art and architecture to India. The emerging Mughal army developed a superior cavalry branch. The cavalry’s horsemen possessed horses and used a wide variety of weapons like swords, shields, lances, more rarely guns. Their armor was made up of steel or leather, and they wore the traditional dress of their tribes. Arif portrays the aforesaid with masterful imagination deploying painterly realism, especially, the Mughal cavalry with elephants bearing richly ornamented sturdy armor.
Among the Mughal military, the artist portrays warships and boats which were used for defending coastlines, controlling piracy and for transportation of men and goods. The inclusion of maritime activity, amidst the subject of warriors, strengthens the artist’s archival aspiration, capturing the essence of sixteenth century Akbarnama paintings of Mughal court painters that depict battles on the Ganges river.
Arif underpins the soft aspect of Mughal lifestyle through artistic representation of royal attire of men and women. Portraits of graceful women dressed in glorious apparel of that era, convey an insight on the feminine grandeur and beauty. Imparting a majestic textural persona to the paintings, the artist handles paints in a variety of application techniques, ranging from scumbling and stippling to bold impasto strokes. Culminating into an enhanced and a more gratifying style, Arif has achieved a distinguished disposition amongst leading painters. The singularity of the artist’s concepts and perception emerging from history, emphasizes the significance of learning from the past; specifically, when the homeland is threatened by conniving adversaries.