
Taking off from the tragic murder in January 1999 of the Pakistani artist Zahoor ul Akhlaq, the book charts the story of this elusive artist. The more the author Roger Connah researched, the more versions of a truth emerged. Known as the "painter's painter" within Pakistan, Akhlaq appears to have lived a life so public that it became secret, a critical fiction. A permanently picaresque figure, Akhlaq recalls those Sufi scholars from the ninth and tenth century in Asia. Beginning with an interest in calligraphy, Akhlaq searched for a vibrant cultural practice in contemporary Pakistan. As an artist-wayfarer in and out of cities like Karachi, Delhi, Lahore, Toronto, London, Montreal, Bangkok, Kabul, Teheran, Tokyo, Venice, this book begins to recount a life in flux, a life on the move, a life exploring the traditions of Islam and the dancing order of a Muslim mind. The necessity and urgency to negotiate the invasions and seductions of Modernity produce unusual reversals in his art and contemporary narratives about the society and culture.
This book investigates the complex intersection of individual artistic identity and the broader socio-political landscape of Pakistan through the life and work of Zahoor ul Akhlaq. Author Roger Connah utilizes the artist's 1999 murder as a focal point to examine the contradictions of a public figure who maintained a deeply private, almost secretive existence. By analyzing Akhlaq's movement across global cities and his engagement with Islamic tradition versus Western modernity, Connah argues that the artist's career serves as a microcosm for the cultural flux of the contemporary Muslim mind.
What You Will Find
Critics and scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of South Asian contemporary art. Readers frequently note the dense, non-linear prose style that mirrors the elusive nature of the subject's life and artistic philosophy.
Page Count:
350
Publication Date:
2012-01-12
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195474724
ISBN-13:
9780195474725
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