| The Haunted Lotus: Contemporary Art from Kabul — 30 Oct to 4 Sept 2010 |
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The difficulties faced by artists in Afghanistan will be dramatically on view in the exhibition The Haunted Lotus: Contemporary Art from Kabul. This war-torn country is now known better for anarchy than aesthetics.
Curated by celebrated artist Khadim Ali, The Haunted Lotus meditates on modernity and tradition, beauty and the bleakness of ‘permanent war’. Ali hopes “The project conveys to those of us in the West, the reality of life in Afghanistan.” Represented here are the “bare life” aesthetics of those struggling to rebuild.
Khadim Ali’s colleagues—Ali Baba Aurang and Sher Ali—teach in Kabul for the Emerald Mountain reconstruction project and its new Institute of Afghan Arts. The show also includes drawings by Zainab Haidary a student representing the hopes of the coming generation. The medium is modern interpretations of the two genres that historically define the region—calligraphy and miniature painting.
These intense drawings on their tattered papers salvaged from Iran and Soviet-times open a window to the daily lives of artists in civil war conditions. Many artists have changed professions. The civil war destroyed the Afghan art rebirth in 1970s and, later, the Taliban declared art a crime (against the state) and a sin. Human Rights Watch says Afghanistan is now a more dangerous country especially for women and Hazara people, a Shi'a minority.
Turquoise Mountain Foundation, founded in 2004, is creating jobs in arts and crafts and rejuvenating the old Kabul city centre. Turquoise Mountain Foundation then established Institute for Afghan Arts and Architecture in Kabul, with co-patrons Prince Charles and President Hamid Karzai.
Beyond the immediate effects of fear, violence, and the destruction of human life, the long war internally displaced many or forced people to flee as refugees. For the last eight years Australia has waged a battle against terrorism and engaged in military conflict in Aghanistan. Ironically, military occupation has initiated a cycle of displacement, economic hardship, and cultural alienation that creates the conditions for new waves of extremism and repressive regimes.
About the Artists Khadim Ali: incorporates classical miniature techniques learnt at Lahore's celebrated National College of Arts, to allude to the persecution of Hazara people by the Taliban and the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddahs. His perfect brushwork presents scenes from the Shahnameh, a Persian epic familiar to generations of Afghan children. Ali’s hero, Rustam, is ambiguous, portrayed as both beautiful and a sinister demon, often armed with AK-47s, bayonets and grenade launchers. With his demon theatre, Ali presents the shifting meanings of heroism: the Taliban were once the mujahideen, freedom-fighters against the Soviet invasion, now Taliban militants declare themselves to be the new ‘winged Rustam’ to mythologise their violence. Meaningless letters and perverted meanings are propaganda for religious fundamentalism. In war anything can be co-opted. Khadim Ali lives in Sydney and works in Kabul and Quetta. He is an Afghan Hazara born as a refugee in Pakistan.
Sher Ali Hussainy: born in Kabul and studying at Beaconhouse National University, Lahore, Pakistan on a South Asian Association (SAARC) Scholarship. Studied miniature painting for six months with Khadim Ali in Karachi and Turquoise Mountain Foundation, Kabul. Teaches at Marefat High School, Kabul and volunteer teacher at Turquoise Mountain Foundation.
Zainab Haidary: studying at the Department of Fine Arts, Kabul University.
About the project Today the Taliban wage an insurgency in the south and east of the country, their control being confined to the border area between Afghanistan and Pakistan. In Bamiyan, when Ali asked children to draw the story of Rustrum, they pictured Taliban and war, massacres and the destruction of the Buddha statues.
Ali Baba Aurang’s works (catalogue nos 12 and 14) use lyrics from
‘Afghanistan we love you’ / ای نینوای جاویدان http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELYGu5c0NMI&feature=related
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