The document discusses an artwork titled "Shadow House" by artist Zarina Hashmi. It is a series of geometrically shaped squares cut into Nepalese paper that evoke images of Islamic architecture and screens. The interplay of light and shade in the work effectively convey the ephemeral nature of a house. The artwork reflects Hashmi's life journey as an Indian artist who moved to New York over 40 years ago and her feelings of displacement from her homeland. It highlights her desire to claim an undivided world as her own and aim to retrieve traces of what she left behind through the process of remembering.
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A luminous sojourn of zarina hashmi amidst the realm of displaced world - Copal Art
1. A luminous sojourn of Zarina Hashmi amidst the realm of displaced world <br />“My heart my restless journey man<br />Come, for they have decreed yet again<br />You and I are to be made homeless one more time<br />To wander the empty streets to roam across the lands<br />……….. to ask each alien passing by <br />If he can tell us –The way home”<br /> Zarina Hashmi<br />On a quiet Saturday evening at India International Centre, Copal Art, India’s leading art advisory bank, concluded the 20th session in its lecture series, The Copal Dialogue. Titled ‘Meditation on the notions of Musafir and Makan’, this session took a closer look at ‘Shadow House’, the work of esoteric artist Zarina Hashmi.’. The artwork was evaluated by acclaimed art historian, educator, writer and curator Ms. Roobina Karode with Mr. Ashok Vajpeyi, Chairman of Copal Art, presiding over the event.<br />In his speech, Mr. Vajpeyi said that it was left to art to discover that all darkness contains some concealed unexplored illuminations about life, existence and nature. This is indeed what the artifice ‘Shadow House’ revealed. A series of geometrically proportioned squares cut on Nepalese paper, it brings to mind images of Islamic architecture’s sculpted stone friezes and the screens (Jali) that allowed women to peep outside without them being seen. The interplay of light and shade effectively evoke a house’s ephemeral nature. <br />“[Zarina’s] work poignantly chronicles her life and recurring themes [in it] include home, displacement, borders, journey and memory. An avid traveler, her art mirrors the multiple meanings that the word ‘home’ has for her,” Roobina explained. An austere and unique vision that is well aligned with the life journey of the artist - an Indian who moved from Aligarh to New York over 40 years ago - the art work shows her displacement from where she was born and brought up to where she lives now. It highlights a desire to claim an undivided world as her own. As a diaspora artist, Zarina views home/nation as an archaeological site for excavation of what she left behind. Her art aims at retrieval and recovery of those traces, through the process of remembering and reflection. The minimal gestures of Zarina’s space and form-making seem to unfold through her creation, etching out a vivid history that deals primarily with migration and the uncertainties of belonging. <br />Zarina’s work showcases a palpable sense of geometry. The artist imbibes sparse aesthetic and its appropriateness to her themes - the transformative play and tragic wit - has much more potent strength than many of her contemporaries. Roobina pointed out the artist’s evident affinity towards paper craft. Her art has always captured a very large geography of experience and insight. Indeed one look at ‘Shadow House’ and one knows that every block etched is reverberating with memories of the past. A simple craft on a paper spread displayed influences of Sufism, Buddhism and Zen aesthetics. The minimalist visual emblems encapsulate the whole experience of a lifestyle or a belief system. One feels that Hashmi, the eternal Odysseus or the Musafir, uncovers her perpetual memories of her Makan.<br />