Gulgee II

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[[Category:Name|Alphabet]]
  
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=Remembering a friend=
  
=Biographical highlights=
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By Ahmed Mirza Jamil
[http://dawn.com/ Dawn]
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1926 Born at Peshawar
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1945 BSc. ( Eng) Aligarh University, India
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1947 MS (Hydraulics), Columbia University, US
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1948 MS (Soil Mechanics), Harvard University, US
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1950 Design Engineer in Stockholm, Sweden
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1953 Deputy Director in Central Engineering Authority, Government of Pakistan
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1957 Painted portrait of King Zahir Shah of Afghanistan in Kabul
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1958 Kabul: created first mosaic portrait
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1959 Exhibition of non-figurative paintings in Kabul
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1962 In Paris married Zarine Maladwala (Zaro) Painted Queen Farah Deeba of Iran
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1968 Accompanied President Ayub Khan on a tour of France, Romania and Turkey. Documented the tour in sketches. Documented President Nixon's tour of Pakistan in sketches
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1969 Awarded medal of Pride of Performance
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1979 Made mosaic portrait of King Faisal bin Abdul Aziz in lapis lazuli
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1982 Awarded Sitara-i-Imtiaz medal
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1988 The Quaid-i-Azam Award at First Art Biennale of Pakistan ’87 exhibition in Karachi.
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1995 Awarded Hilal-i-Imtiaz
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2000 Established Gulgee Museum in Clifton, Karachi
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2004 Exhibited his work at the South Asian Masters' Show, Alhamra, Lahore
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2007 Found murdered in his home on Dec 19 along with wife and a maid servant
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=The last word=
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Compiled by Marjorie Husain
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[http://dawn.com/ Dawn]
 
[http://dawn.com/ Dawn]
  
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Since I heard about the gruesome murder of my friend Gulgee, his wife and their maid, I have just not been able to reconcile with the ugly reality. When I think of Gulgee my mind races back to some time in the early 1960s. It all started when I was given greeting cards to print for Burmah Shell; the sketch of a camel-cart and its coachman done in crayons by a not-very-well- known artist who answered to the name of Ismail Gulgee.
  
Gulgee will be remembered for the stunning breadth of his erudition and taste. Asim Akhter recalls a protean figure whose love of art was matched only by his joie de vivre
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In those days block printing was in vogue, where the screen could not be removed from the background. I was told that the artist was insistent that the screen should be done away with in the background but the shade of the camel cart should not be removed. I at once thought that the artist was a professional, which was why he had laid down that condition.
  
It is hard not to be light-hearted when remembering Ismail Gulgee. He was one of those rare people who, though deeply serious, were never ponderous or solemn. His was a quintessentially blithe spirit. Walter Benjamin once wrote of “events that affect us like an echo — awakened by a sound that seems to have issued from a past life.” News of Gulgee’s death, on the eve of December 18, came as a shock; but what has proved more difficult is the fact of his silence.
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At Elite Publishers, we had just introduced offset printing but in those days there were no scanners. Colour separation was done more or less manually. I had bought a locally made wooden process camera to make films so I used that and the remaining work was done by hand, which was a painstaking and time-consuming job, demanding expertise. I had to do several experiments before getting the desired result.
  
Ismail Gulgee was as prolific a talker as he was a painter. As soon as one met him, the talk began, and the intensity of word-flow easily rivalled the density of encounter he so carefully staged in his art. His interviews remain the best accounts of his work — a discursive component that amplified and complicated his projects rather than subsuming them to explanation. Gulgee’s talk was so thoroughly enmeshed with his art that it often became impossible to extricate oneself from the spell of the telling. He held a tight grip on the reading of his work. He was not a writer but his penchant for open-ended interviews worked to project a type of voice-over for his larger productions.
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The card was printed and the client was more than happy; shortly after the cards were delivered my secretary told me that one Mr Gulgee had come to see me. We had moved to the SITE (Sindh Industrial and Trading Estate) area, which was in those days considered a God forsaken place and people thought twice before visiting somebody there. I asked for him immediately. In fact I remember I went out of my room to escort him back.
  
For Gulgee control seemed to extend well beyond the ostensible parameters of a given project. His art, he intimated over and over, had to incorporate, within the piece, the anticipation and preparation of a form, the form itself, and the interaction with the form.
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Gulgee was profuse in his praise for the job done and I was impressed that here was a man who didn’t think that once he had handed over his artwork, his responsibility was over. We clicked from the word go.
  
His art built no distance into the viewing experience — he often said explicitly that he treated viewers as figures in his fields. He structured the encounters and territories he staked out with such manic precision, and took such personal pride in their execution, that everything was somehow connected (and potentially amusing or meaningful or useful or dangerous), but that you the spectator had a part to play. The pursuit of such encounters gave rise to a kind of process art as obsessed with internal control as with what the process catalysed, at the risk of hyperbole, might be described as a transformation of consciousness.
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From then onwards every time he designed something that was to be printed, he insisted that the job be given to me. His standards were high and it was a challenge to prove equal to them. I am glad that he was never disappointed.
  
Gulgee systematically identified the most sacred of our cows, and he was the first artist since Sadequain who managed to tap the vestigial roots of religious belief in the investigation of contemporary obsessions. The consciousness he was working toward depended on conflations of our inherited ancestral beliefs with the fallout of a post-industrial consumer culture.
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Even during the period when I had taken a sabbatical from Elite Publishers, whenever a greeting card or a calendar designed by Gulgee was sent to Elite, I got involved in it completely.
  
I met Gulgee in the fall of 1988, in Peshawar — an unlikely place for two Pakistanis to cross paths for the first time. He had been invited to show a series of his paintings at the Abbasin Arts Council, and I had gone there to review it. We took lunch together in the adjoining auditorium, and later on, a walk past manicured lawns and tanned joggers exhibiting their vacuous physicality. The morning smog had just lifted, and we talked quietly, getting past the formal introduction. As I got to know Gulgee’s work better, I wondered why my friends had been so hostile. Wasn’t he exactly the kind of hero they had praised, a deterritorialised thinker surfing the flows of capital?
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With the passage of time we became friends. He was very reliable and sincere. When I was the district governor of Rotary Club and we were celebrating 75 years of Rotary International we decided to invite Prince Karim Aga Khan, who very graciously accepted the invitation. The question was what to give him as a memento. I had seen the portrait of the late Aga Khan’s done beautifully by Gulgee in lapis lazuli, so I suggested that we print that and then thought of doing a portfolio with a few sketches of the family members of the late Aga Khan. Who could have been a better choice than Gulgee to do the sketches — he was a sketch maker par excellence.
  
My most immediate association with Gulgee had for a long time been his uncanny deployment of colour. He used it like a ‘painter’; he also administered it like a drug, as a kind of cathartic antidote to his own impulse to make a mess. The clear shapes and looser daubs of colour punctuated the seemingly endless web of calligraphic swirls that stretched across the vast interior.
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Time was short and the assignment was demanding, particularly since we wanted to do a quality job, something worthy of the great family. The one major plus point was that the artist and the publisher/printer were on the same wavelength. We were both racing against time, and were in touch with each other at least three times a day.
  
Caustically witty but deadpan, at once blatant and highly ambivalent, he was low-key and soft-spoken; and he believed this even while he was, at heart, a loner. He was daunted by nothing. Even when his illness meant he no longer could hold a brush, he continued to break through established categories of composing and making paintings.
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The portfolio was printed and both Gulgee and I felt ten feet tall when the Aga Khan liked it immensely and was generous in his praise. Prince Karim Aga Khan declared that he would display the sketches in his palace in Paris. In all, there were 12 sketches in addition to the reproduction of the portrait of the late Aga Khan done earlier.
  
Gulgee was an indefatigable traveller. While staying in Karachi, he had found the heart of vacancy in up-North hamlets like Doongagalli and Nathiagalli, where he would spend every summer without fail in his wooden retreat, almost in nostalgia of his high-school days at Lawrence College in Ghoragalli.
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If you look at the sketches, some of which appear in this issue of Gallery, you will notice that with few strokes and minimal lines Gulgee brought out the resemblance of the people he painted. There is spontaneity in his work, in other words it doesn’t come across as laboured. Another strong point is his drawing in black and white crayons on coloured backgrounds such as grey or bronze, which was not an easy thing to do.
  
I can’t comment on Gulgee’s personal life more than to say that the lines between life and art certainly did seem to blur, and since he took it all so personally and seriously, it is ironic that his art was challenged around questions of morality. Like his contemporaries, Gulgee thought big and probed deep. His capacity to envision, simulate, explore, and exit both perfect worlds and black holes was huge. Now he’s exited our real world and left us in the dirt. With his death mired in mystery, the artistic horizon isn’t going to clear as easily as the morning smog!
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His wonderful portrayal of midday sunlight reminds me of the works of Langhmer, a Czech refugee in India in the 1940s and I have a feeling that Gulgee might have been influenced by him.
  
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Gulgee’s dedication to his work was just as astounding as his humility. He never talked of his achievements and what is no less, he never spoke ill of anybody. When somebody indulged in backbiting or gossip mongering, he remained quiet making it obvious that he was not enjoying the conversation.
  
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We last met at the Japanese Consulate’s function to celebrate the Japanese emperor’s birthday. “Let’s get together and talk of the good old days,” he told me. He didn’t know, nor did I, or for that matter anybody else, that his days were numbered. May God rest his soul in peace.
  
=A towering personality=
 
  
By Asif Noorani
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=Gulgee as I knew him=
  
[http://dawn.com/ Dawn]
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By Jalaluddin Ahmed
  
It was Eid and I had gone to see Amin Gulgee to offer him my condolences. There were policemen around his house and his late father’s, which was on the same large plot of land; the cops had lived up to their reputation of reaching the site of the crime well after it was committed. Ameen’s servant told me that he was in no position to meet people.
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Human beings may be expendable; but what they have the power to create and leave behind could belong to another domain which is neither easy nor necessary to define: Iqbal alluded to it as the realm of the ‘Keepers of God’s secrets’.
  
Contrary to what was reported in the Press, I was told that a large number of people including many artists and art lovers were at Gulgee’s funeral.
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Gulgee often talked about art as a journey, a pilgrimage, in search of a ‘there’ that unbeknown to us is also ‘here’, the continuation of an inner life, often no more than its visible externalisation. Last time we met at a friend’s house, our conversation turned to the Simurgh of Fariduddin Al-Attar’s Mantaq-at-Tair (Conference of the Birds), the 12th century epic in which 30 birds set out on a journey to meet their Lord and Master. The journey across endless deserts, mountains and valleys, ends in a ‘nowhere’, making them self-aware that they contain within themselves what they are seeking. (Si-murgh in Persian means 30 birds).
  
The following day I was at artist and art collector Wahab Jaffer’s house, who was a close friend of Gulgee’s. I could see that he was still in a state of shock.
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Yet, Gulgee was a man of the world, of this world, celebrating, portraying, enhancing life as perhaps only an artist can. He was a friend of friends, jovial and scholarly, soft-spoken but definitive, precise even when being expansive. His early initiation as a mathematician and engineer gave him skills and insights which stayed with him all his life. I remember the excitement tempered with minutely worked out details neatly spread on sheets of paper as he cheerfully manipulated one of the heaviest hand-beaten sculptures (approximately seven tons) which he had created for the Faisal mosque in Islamabad. As we discussed some of the calligraphic flourishes for the mosque’s pulpit and the niche, he quietly spoke of coming to calligraphy — or calligraphy to him — rather late in life. “I have taught myself how to learn, and I enjoy learning”, he said casually, almost as in a whisper to himself, and moved on.
  
Answering a question, Wahab Jaffer said that he first met Gulgee in 1971 when Ali Imam, the noted artist and art educator, took him to the artist’s home in what was then Karachi’s most posh area KDA Scheme No. 1. Jaffer was in those days merely an art collector and had not yet picked up the paint brush. “Gulgee was so unassuming and disarming that in the very first meeting I developed the feeling that I had known him for years. I bought my first Gulgee (Wahab has a number of them) in 1973. It was for Rs 3,000 but he gave it to me at half the price.
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I came to know him while researching for my book Art in Pakistan way back in the 1950s. At our meeting he mentioned having had his Honours in Engineering from Aligarh Muslim University in 1945 — it was a year earlier than my own brief stint there teaching English. “I am still an engineer, and not an unsuccessful one as careers go,” he confided with characteristic nonchalance, and added, “But my heart is in painting has always been, and that is what I am going to do.” He did — and over the years gave painting itself new forms, meanings and dimensions.
  
His residence was like an open house, where his friends and admirers dropped in unannounced. It was a treat watching him paint. He was like a man possessed, who would stare at blank canvas, often large — something like ten feet by four feet — with an eight inch wide brush, with different colours applied on it, and then charge like a bull. He would in no time finish the painting, leaving the finishing touches to be done later. Like a dancer he would move his hands vigorously. He worked with demonic energy said Wahab Jaffer, in whose study there are two amazing works of the departed painter. One is from his famous Nukta series.
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The late Annemarie Schimmel, herself a mystic and one of the last century’s finest western scholars of Islamic art, paid him a fitting tribute, “Who would have imagined that an artist can create an amazing sculpture of a Quranic ayat in all the different calligraphic styles… I never forget my joy when I was confronted for the first time with the mihrab in the Faisal mosque in Islamabad, that enormous prayer niche in the shape of an open book, made of marble, with Surah ar-Rahman written on its pages in powerful golden Eastern Kufi, and the pages bound together by a magnificent mirrored ‘Allah’ in lapis lazuli.
  
“Gulgee’s house was one place where no one would feel unwelcome,” Wahab continued, “He often threw parties where one saw the cream of the society including diplomats. I remember one such occasion, when he had invited a large number of artists, art writers, art collectors, socialites and diplomats when he was to give final touches to a portrait, I can’t remember whether that was of a member of the royal Saudi family or someone from the Aga Khan family. But it was a grand occasion. That was sometime in the eighties.
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Gulgee was easy to get along with and we kept meeting now and again as he ambled through photography to drawing and painting, with exploratory forays into the third dimensional. He steadily matured as an astute painter of portraits. This also meant his frequent travels on commissions abroad, making him available to us back home less and less, mostly only ‘in transit’ as friends teased him. He brought back ‘stories’ of the high and mighty whom he painted, and the new mediums and styles he was discovering or inventing.
  
The Paris-based artist Ajmal Husain, told me that he knew Gulgee since 1952, when he was heavily into photography. “We lived close to each other and were more friends than neighbours. I knew he was a passionate photographer so when I became the editor of The Illustrated Weekly of Pakistan, I gave him assignments.
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I recall one of his visits to Kabul, returning from there with child-like excitement about the possibilities of marble which he diligently studied and came to handle with the felicity, freedom and affection that would do credit to an artist as much as to a craftsman. He was also developing an interest in calligraphy and Islamic art, generally, reading a great deal about mysticism and its various manifestations in the East and the West.
  
I distinctly remember the pictures that he took at an international tennis tournament. He gave me some unusual human interest shots, which I published happily. He was not a run-of-the mill photographer just as he was not a stereotypical painter. One day when we met after a long interval I asked him why he gave up photography; he said his younger brother was a photographer and there was just enough room for one photographer in the family. I don’t know how much of that was in jest and how much in earnest.”
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At about this time my own career path took me away from Pakistan for nearly three decades, with only brief visits here once or twice a year. Our meetings were few and far between, until 1986 when he came for an extended visit to London and agreed to sit for a wide-ranging interview which we published in the journal Arts & the Islamic World. In it he forcefully argued, “The ultimate direction of art will be spiritual. That is the only thing which has depth and all the other reasons — Cubism, this ‘ism’, that ‘ism’ — are just pieces of whimsical nothingness. Very important in artistry of course, because the whole structure has been built around it, but ultimately man’s relation with God or with nature, or with himself — which is the same thing as man’s relationship with God — will extend the power of art.”
  
Human rights activist and art lover, Zohra Yusuf comments, “Gulgee was a highly creative artist and there was a lot of diversity in his work. He brought vibrancy and movement to calligraphy. His strokes were powerful and they gave movement to the written art form.
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Gulgee was arguably the most prolific among Pakistani artists working in the decades of 1950 onwards, and it has often occurred to me that while he had his first solo exhibition in Stockholm as early as 1950, followed over the next few years by those in Ottawa, Tehran and Kabul, he did not have a solo exhibition in Pakistan until the late 1970s. Of course his work was seen in group shows and in situ on commissioned assignments, but apparently he was torn between styles and genres, experimenting and innovating, sketching on paper and grappling with bronze, making portraits in oil and in marble, creating emblems, murals, sculptures, and working with onyx and lapis lazuli.
  
Two other ladies, one a brilliant artist and the other a highly knowledgeable curator, on my request emailed me their views on Gulgee. One is Boston-based Lubna Agha and the other is Sameera Raja of Canvas Gallery, Karachi.
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It would appear that he ultimately opted for responding to the rhetorical question he himself posed in an erudite lecture sometime ago at the Aga Khan auditorium in Karachi, “How can man’s efforts be compared to the word of God?Of course it cannot be compared to the word of God, but perhaps comes nearest to comprehending and embracing it!
 
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Lubna Agha wrote: “When the Dutch master Karel Appel died at the age of 85, the Guardian obituary famously declared, ‘He absorbed a variety of intellectual and artistic influences, out of which developed a frenetic style of sweeping brushstrokes and vibrant, even lurid, colours.’ The same can be said of Gulgee, who was master of the colourful canvas and a major figure in the art scene in Pakistan. As I grew up, as an art student, I felt the presence of this pre-eminent artist everywhere. He took calligraphy to a new level, incorporating the modern with the classic in a manner never seen before in Pakistan.
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“In my memory, Gulgee will always be remembered for his great talent, and though his work was greatly sought after, he was never known to boast. I last met him at the art exhibition in Pasadena, California in 1995, where he was once again at his gracious and kindest best. It is unbelievable that such a nice person, such a major figure on the art scene should meet such a tragic end. To say that his death has created a void is to state the very obvious.”
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Sameera Raja’s email read, “Gulgee was an artist who had dedicated his life to the arts. A most prolific and talented artist, Gulgee lived his life passionately and with great humility. An artist of immense stature, an icon of Pakistani art, Gulgee was a warm, gentle, humble soul. He greeted every one with a smile and a twinkle in his eyes. He loved beauty in every form and would jokingly flirt with every good looking lady.
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“His work encompassed spectacular portraits of notable personalities such as the Quaid-e-Azam, the Shah of Iran, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Benazir Bhutto, Gen Ziaul Haq, President Ronald Reagan, Prince Karim Aga Khan, Air Marshal (Retd) Nur Khan and numerous dignitaries. His portraits in lapis lazuli were so well made that it seemed as if the eyes followed you around the room.
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“He once told me that he started calligraphy in response to his inner voice. That his hand just flowed of its own volition and the most beautiful Quranic scripts emerged from it. The movement in these and his abstract works was mesmerising.”
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Well known sculptor and the Principal of Karachi School of Art, Rabia Zuberi pointed out yet another aspect of Gulgee’s personality “He was very happy to be in the company of art students. As long as his health permitted he spent hours with them and never turned down any invitation. He didn’t criticise any work. He gave his suggestion very gently and above all he was very encouraging. One day he told me ‘I feel like studying art in your school and sitting with these students who have such a fresh approach to painting and sculpture’.”
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Leading artist Nahid Raza summed up Gulgee most succinctly when she said, “Gulgee was a dervish. He was a great artist and an innocent man, who certainly didn’t deserve that kind of an end.”
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===Reaction from the art world===
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In an issue of Focus on Pakistan, published in 1973, Naz Ikramullah thus begins her article on Gulgee: “What sort of an artist is he? What sort of a man? Gulgee is so well known today that it is difficult to write an objective assessment. I know his work. I know of his work, and I know of him. Let me start then at a stage when Gulgee first seemed to me to be the most fortunate artist in town.”
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The writer is Director General, Foundation for Museum of Modern Art (Fomma), Pakistan
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This page: Umra, 1974, Oil on gold and silver leaf on canvas
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Facing page: Gulgee in his studio
  
Though it is still not possible to do an objective assessment of his work, but the way he was killed, Gulgee did not end up as the most fortunate artist in the city. In his life he enjoyed the respect, admiration and popularity, but his tragic death grieved many who interacted with him, liked his work and loved him, solely because he was always humble, cheerful and friendly; so much so that whoever met him left with a feeling of some strong bondage with the eminent artist.
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=Flowers for Gulgee=
  
At the news of his murder, his friends and contemporaries expressed their feelings about the man, his art and his tragic killing. The art community in Lahore expressed its grief and remembered him very fondly.
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By Quddus Mirza
  
Salima Hashmi, Dean of the SVA at the Beaconhouse National University said, “I think one needs to stand back from the terrible, disturbing circumstances of his death, and look at him as the last of the ‘first generation’, as someone who was self-taught; once he had discovered his talent, he had the confidence to let it consume him.
 
 
“A keen observer, he worked tremendously hard with great energy to arrive at certain signature styles which then became ‘Gulgee’. Interesting, that he played the three strands in his work, all with vigour: the representational, the calligraphic and the abstract expressionist. I think this maybe because he was self taught and chose to ensure he was trying out all he knew.”
 
 
Naazish Ata-Ullah, Principal of National College of Arts stated: “The murder is outrageous. To be committed in the privacy of the artist’s home even more contemptible. The vulnerability and fragility of old age saddens one even further. Gulgee seemed invincible. His energy and zest for life was remarkable. His illustrious career spanned many decades and, in the context of Pakistani art, his expressionistic manner was unusual and individualistic. Ironically, his partner the indomitable Zaro, was also struck down. This tragic turn of events harshly reminds us of the unpredictable and helpless condition we find ourselves in. Fellow artist, Amin, we mourn with you. We hang our heads in shame. We pray in silence.”
 
 
Shahnawaz Zaidi, Chairman of the College of Art and Design at Punjab University commented: “Gulgee’s murder reflects the ultimate degradation and decadence of our society. It is the greatest shock after Zahoor and Hakeem Saeed. We are deprived of his creative genius which could give further happiness to so many of us”.
 
 
Rahat Naveed Masud, artist, said: “I did not know him at a personal level but he always came across as a very gentle person, a painter who could speak the language of a true artist. Its sad that his life should have come to such a violent end. He epitomised the quintessential artist persona both with his unique manner of speaking and his signature style contributing towards establishing Pakistani identity in visual arts both at home and abroad. His death is mourned as a great national loss”.
 
 
Tanya Suhail, the curator of Alhamra Art Gallery, expressed her thoughts in these words: “Gulgee had created a niche for himself in the art world and his work is in some important collections. He was a person who enjoyed talking and being with people and that was the best thing about him.”— Quddus Mirza
 
 
=Life and works of a genius=
 
 
 
[http://dawn.com/ Dawn]
 
[http://dawn.com/ Dawn]
  
Now that Gulgee and his life’s partner, Zaro, have so tragically left us, the nation is in a state of shock and the world of art is a much colder and far less colourful place. We, and the generations to come, must honour his memory by celebrating his life and his achievements, and remember him for the brilliant work accomplished, writes Marjorie Hussain
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It was in his own museum where I saw Gulgee and his paintings, drawings and sculptures, with a number of students from NCA, when we paid a visit to the aging but highly active artist. Several young students — some for the first time in an artist’s studio — were shy to speak to a man who appeared to have emerged from the history of Pakistan art.
  
At the inauguration of Gulgee Museum in 2000, with charming deference to his illness, he lauded the efforts of Zaro and of his son Amin, who supported his father with an arm around his shoulders throughout the event. One will always remember Gulgee as he was that evening.
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They were reluctant to ask questions, or request for a photograph with him, but amazingly it was Gulgee who took the initiative, gave a full tour of his museum, explained his works, shared his thoughts, laughed with us and urged the students to have pictures taken with him. His kindness, honesty and enthusiasm encouraged the young visitors to be close to him, and treat him as a grandfather-like figure.
  
Abdul Mohammad Ismail, known to the world as ‘Gulgee’ was an internationally celebrated artist, one whose genius gained honour and distinction for his country. Some years ago in Turkey, an award was conferred on him as a symbol of Renaissance (re-birth) of art in the Muslim world. Gulgee’s work embodied the essence of that period in art history with stunning innovations drawn from colour and light.
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Perhaps Gulgee enjoyed this role interacting with those who approached him, even if only to ask for work. For him making a human connection was more important than any thing else; so occasions he gave away his paintings as gifts. It was a form of sharing his creative achievement with others. This side of his personality was evident in the way he warmly spoke to students about the process and development of his art. A creative life that began in 1950, with his first one person exhibition held in Stockholm till his last days in Karachi, and produced abstract paintings, calligraphies (and combination of the two), portraits of important personalities, sketches and mosaics.
  
Passionate in his desire to express a spiritual outpouring, Pakistan’s Gulgee shared the artistic brilliance of artists of his age. His work was exhibited in capital cities throughout the world. His art was reviewed and praised in international newspapers. In Pakistan he was honoured with the highest national awards and though he mounted comparatively few exhibitions in Pakistan, he was widely known and dearly loved.
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It will take some time to properly evaluate the real position of Gulgee in Pakistani art, but one must pay homage to his untiring energy that was responsible for creating innumerable canvases, with pure abstract imagery, and the name of God or the script from the Quran, composed in a painterly manner. With his work, in different dimensions and mediums, Gulgee demonstrated a dedication to his craft and visual concerns. That turned into an unmistakeable mark of Gulgee, which a number of artists tried to copy — or forge, but no one was successful.
  
Gulgee was born in Peshawar in 1926. His father was an engineer and Gulgee attributed his love of art and talent to his grandfather who painted “exquisite watercolours”. His grandfather was his mentor, one who initiated his enjoyment of nature and all its spectrum of colour. At an early age Gulgee’s future had been mapped out for him as an engineer. At the Alligarh University he graduated in BSc. but his interest centred on art. He went on to Columbia University, for an MS (Hydraulics) and in 1948, he took another MS (Soil Mechanics) from Harvard; yet the urge for art was never subdued. At night the engineer disappeared and the artist emerged. Canvases and colours were set in place and he painted until the early hours of the morning.
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The success of Gulgee lay in his scheme of capturing the moment through the loaded brush strokes. Although he acquired a distinct style (a kind of appropriation of abstract aesthetics), he never boasted about his own originality or his status in Pakistani art. Instead, like a genuine painter — he spent more of his time making art — despite all sorts of distractions and temptations to make money.
  
In the early 1950s, he gained experience as a design engineer in Stockholm, where he mounted his first exhibition of paintings before returning to Karachi in 1953, to take up the post of deputy director in Central Engineering Authority, Government of Pakistan. He was a consultant on the Mangla and Warsak dam projects, but his heart was set on art.
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I recall an earlier meeting with him in his studio. I was with a friend who runs a private gallery in Karachi. With his usual smile, he welcomed us, showed his new canvases, but his interaction with the gallery owner was not professional at all. No discussion about pricing, gallery commission or other delicate matters about marketing his art took place. He was more interested in talking about the origin of his work, sharing his technique with us, discussing different aspects, taking us around his house — and basically charming both of us with his warm personality, soft spoken manners and sophisticated ideas.
  
In those years in Karachi there were few art facilities, no art schools or galleries and artists showed their work at the YMCA or in private residencies. At the behest of the then prime minister, Mohammad Ali Bogra, concerned citizens began to organise fund raising events for the Arts Council, Karachi. In 1957, there was an art auction and the PM acted as auctioneer. Gulgee had contributed drawings of the Aga Khan, H.H. Sir Sultan Mohammad Shah, and these excited much attention.
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Images of him, in his work clothes — taking us to different rooms, explaining his paintings and touching his mosaics — surfaced when I heard the terrible news. Even though we are living in a society where murder has become common one could not associate this kind of departure with a person like Gulgee. In that respect his death recalled that of another artist, Zahoorul Akhlaq, since both were murdered close to Eid — and in the last days of December. Besides the similar pattern of their deaths, the two artists had some other common characteristics, as both were respected and regarded as harmless, loving individuals — with no enemies.
  
King Zahir Shah of Afghanistan, who was visiting Karachi, commissioned Gulgee to paint his portrait. Gulgee related that for the first and only time in his life he dressed up for the sittings, wearing an olive green (his favorite colour), silk jacket. Charmed with his portrait, the king invited Gulgee to Afghanistan to paint the royal family.
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If the death of Gulgee reflects our society, the life of the painter represents our culture. As in the words of Ngugi wa Thiong’o, art is an essential component of culture, because like a flower, which portrays beauty as well as contains seeds to regenerate the plant, art conveys aesthetic qualities and transmits the human experience. The art of Gulgee plays that role. His work, recalling abstract art in Pakistan, also suggests the efforts of our artists to imbibe influences from outside and to formulate personal expressions and an indigenous vocabulary.
  
While in Kabul, Gulgee held his first exhibition of non-figurative art, it was held at the USIS centre in 1959 presided over by the American ambassador. In 1960, an American artist, Elaine Hamilton, visited Pakistan and asked Gulgee to join her in a staged demonstration of painting, Abstract Expressionism worked to music. Ever after he was irked when it was stated that he was influenced by Elaine and he showed his illustrated Kabul brochure of 1959 as a witness of his early foray into abstraction. Yet it was to be years before he could finally devote his energy to the powerful gestural work he described as “emerging deep from within his own psyche.
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Presumably this feature — transforming a mainstream art movement into a local context — made Gulgee the household icon and one of the most recognised painters of Pakistan. For a society that hardly cares about its visual artists, Gulgee was a familiar name and a much loved personality. On many occasions he returned the love and expressed his desire to donate his works to a national collection — a dream that has remained unfulfilled by his death.
  
In Kabul he began to design his superlative mosaic artworks. Visiting an onyx marble plant, he noticed the floor strewn with marble chips. The sun shining off the pieces drew his eye and his thoughts turned to Islamic tradition and the decorative aspects of surfaces embedded with small pieces of stone or glass. Excited by the possibilities he created his first portrait worked in mosaics, taking the mosaic technique further than ever before.
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=Remembering Gulgee in different voices=
  
King Zahir Shah was so pleased with his portrait that he immediately commissioned a mosaic artwork of a landscape with camels to be presented to the American president. These were the first of the artist’s internationally acclaimed series of artworks rendered in mosaic fragments of lapis, jade and marble. He created a superb portrait of H.H. The Aga Khan, Sir Sultan Mohammad Shah and was to produce exquisite portraits of such eminent figures as King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, Presidents Ronald Reagan and Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, each portrait taking months of work.
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By Asif Noorani
 
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Ali Imam always maintained that it was Gulgee’s work in mosaics that would ensure his place of honour in the history of world art. After relinquishing his career as an engineer, Gulgee devoted himself entirely to art, painting with inspired energy for hours at a stretch.
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In 1960, Gulgee accompanied H.H. the Aga Khan to Dhaka, and there he saw for the first time a slim, vivacious girl named Zarine Maladwala, who was visiting the city with her parents. She was a chemistry major, affectionately known as Zaro, and Gulgee was smitten on the spot. In 1962, the two were married romantically in Paris, Zaro wearing a white silk sari. Years later he told me, “She was strikingly beautiful” and pointed out a tenderly executed pencil-drawn portrait he had made of her in 1964.
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From the beginning Zaro recognised the importance of her husband’s work and throughout her life did everything in her power to facilitate him. Two children completed the family circle, Amin, the national award-winning sculptor, and Zarmin, their daughter who gave the Gulgees two grandchildren.
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Gulgee’s work in Islamic calligraphy started in 1969, when he was commissioned to design a copper shield six feet in diameter and inscribed with calligraphy for the Expo Tokyo. Another epic work in bronze was created that year for the Muslim Foreign Ministers’ conference, but Gulgee related that it was in the 1970s, that his involvement with calligraphy began in earnest. He painted a mural on the subject of Muslim unity for the King Faisal Hospital in Riyadh, and continued this theme in a painting produced for the Islamic Summit held in Lahore in 1974. Gulgee’s work at that time strongly supported Sadequain’s movement in popularising calligraphy in art and inspiring other artists to follow their lead.
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To Gulgee the creative process was spiritually inspired. He described how the experience of Umra in 1974 proved a turning point in his life. Coming face to face with al-hajar al-aswad, the sacred black stone at the Kaaba, he was moved beyond tears. Gulgee related that although he had been working in calligraphy for years, after that moment he felt a new freedom entered his work, a freshness and intimacy as though he had been admitted to a new area of expression.
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“It was as though God had sensed the need of my heart and opened his arms to me.” He began a series of paintings titled Nukta. In the work that followed a predominant circular motif linked his painting to the experience of Umra.
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Over the years Gulgee took fewer and fewer portrait commissions. In 1998, a lapis mosaic of the elegant princess Hussa Binte Khalid was completed. It was a two-year project which was to be the last of its kind. I asked him if he contemplated any other portrait in mosaics, and he replied the only one he would like to do was that of the Quaid-i-Azam. “I love the man,” he said, but his precious time and vigour, he explained was best devoted to the powerful calligraphic imagery, the gestural rhythms sung by sufis transcending earthly matter. Gulgee’s calligraphy had been translated into a unique painterly dimension rather than to be read in a traditional way, transporting the classic movements and rhythms into the realms of the abstract.
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Examining the large canvases in Gulgee Museum, the observer sees the light reflecting on textured areas of gold, orange, green, yellow. Tiny fragments of mirror imbedded in paint sparkled in the light of unexpected angles, creating enchantment. Gulgee delighted in his work and in earlier days it was an exciting experience to view him at the canvas. Using a heavy impasto of direct, pure colour, he whirled, jumped, and traversed the length of the canvas with dancing steps, turning flexible wrists that bore the weight of heavy brushes. He worked intuitively, his entire being involved in the act of describing his feelings of mystic rapture with fitting beauty.
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Exhibitions of Gulgee’s work abroad have been numerous, traversing the globe from Kabul, Stockholm, Bangladesh, Bombay, London, Washington, New York, Japan and India. I once asked him why his exhibitions in Pakistan were so few, he explained there were few venues with large enough hanging space for his paintings. One finds a superb example of his work at the Defence Authority Library, and at the Aga Khan Hospital in Karachi.
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In 1988 he held an exhibition of his work at the Indus Gallery, Karachi, after a 15-year gap. On that occasion, art critic Gregory Minissale gave a wonderful summing up of the paintings exhibited: “Like the artist, they are joyous and energetic; they are a celebratory affirmation of the positive aspects of life while the complexity and mystique are reflections of a vision that springs from the churning sea of the creative subconscious.”
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In 1994, there was a Retrospective exhibition of Gulgee’s work held at the National Assembly, Islamabad. In 1995, he exhibited at the Commonwealth Institute, London.
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Gulgee was concerned about the dearth of art museums in the country and excited by the work of younger artists. He asked, “But will it be there to enrich museums and leave something behind for future generations to enjoy; or will it be dispersed all over the globe, transported by foreign visitors eventually to sink into oblivion?”
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Like many of the country’s Masters, Gulgee was concerned for his art in times to come. In 2000 he achieved his long desired ambition to establish a Gulgee Museum to preserve a permanent collection of his work for future generations. He had been suffering from serious health problems but that night he shrugged illness aside and positively shone with happiness. With charming deference he lauded the efforts of Zaro and of his son Amin, who supported his father with an arm around his shoulders throughout the event. One will always remember Gulgee as he was that evening.
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In 2004 , his work was shown at an exhibition of distinguished South Asian Artists; Old Masters — Young Voices that took place at the Alhamra, Lahore. That was his last exhibition in Pakistan outside the museum.
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With Zaro ever in attendance, Gulgee continued to travel. Summers were spent in Nathiagali, where he loved to paint outdoors. There was a constant stream of visitors dropping in and he was animated by the attention, enjoying the discussions on art with friends. To the end of his life Gulgee worked with a passion, his life illuminated with the sheer joy of being an artist.
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=‘He lives in his art’=
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[http://dawn.com/ Dawn]
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Seek him in his canvases. Delve into the chemistry of colour and gesture he invoked to feel and appreciate the spirit that prompted his creativity, says Salwat Ali
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His aesthetics had reached an optimum but his best just kept coming and one seldom realised that the artist had stopped inventing years ago. Snug in the niche he had carved for himself Gulgee continued to paint because the passion to do so never diminished. The energy to capture that elusive, fleeting moment was still so apparent in his calligraphies.
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KARACHI: It was Gulgee’s bad luck that he was murdered shortly before the country’s most popular leader Benazir Bhutto was assassinated. His sad end somehow receded in the memory of his compatriots, more so because the tragic death of BB was followed by a reign of looting and destruction. But all said, Abdul Ismail Gulgee, one of the very few titanic figures in this country’s history of visual arts, certainly doesn’t deserve to be forgotten even for a while.
  
There was ‘husn’ and ‘masti’ (‘beauty’ and ‘ecstasy’, terms of endearment he used to describe his brushwork) in his flamboyant multi-hued strokes. Swishing and sashaying across the canvas they were hallmarks of a Gulgee original.
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The FOMMA-DHA Art Centre rose to the occasion when under its honorary director Nighat Mir a memorial meeting was held at the beautifully restored barrack turned art centre. Zulfiqar Ali Lakhani, chairman FOMMA, was supposed to be there, but the man who wears so many hats may have been detained elsewhere. Conspicuous by his absence was FOMMA’s executive director Jalal Uddin Ahmed. He is these days in the UAE in connection with his latest passion -- the revival of the splendid journal Art and the Islamic World, which was once edited with distinction by Azra Jalal, when they were settled in London.
  
Devoid of pictorial narrations, calligraphic paintings thrive on painterly bravado, colour, composition and the scripted word to create impact, and Gulgee had mastered these basics to immense advantage — his was a grandiose signature. Thoroughly conversant with the diversity of the sacred script (having studied it deeply for 35 years) his own improvisation of Arabic vocabulary was rendered in the American, Abstract Expressionist mannerism of action painting.
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Nighat Mir set the ball rolling and did rather well when she said had she been able to communicate with the great artist she would have told him “Gulgee, your departure has left a gaping hole in the vast canvas of the art world, not just in Pakistan but all over the world.” She was right because artists and artistes of his calibre are citizens of the world.
  
His calligraphic art began to peak in the 1970s and was spotlighted by displays and presentations at high profile venues like the Islamic Summit conferences, the Aga Khan Centre in London and corporate offices in the Middle East and the United States. Gulgee continued to grow in stature and by the ‘90s he had become one of Pakistan’s most eminent and highly acclaimed artists. But fame was not new to him he had already made a name for himself as a portraitist in the late ‘50s.
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A frail looking Amin Gulgee was there too. He spoke of his father and mother in a voice charged with emotions. “I used to call him dada, and my mother mama. They were great friends and I give them full marks for bringing us up, that is, me and my sister, as they did. They were so much interested in each other. They were best of friends. They were different in nature which is why they made a successful couple.” He dwelt on the ‘made for each other’ theme before he talked about the talents and the accomplishments of his father as an artist. At one point it seemed he would break down but he didn’t. Nighat Mir was holding his arm in support.
  
As part of the official entourage he had the opportunity to meet many heads of state when he was called upon to make impromptu sketches of leaders and delegates in conferences. He sketched President de Gaulle in pen and ink and presented his drawings to him at the Elysee Palace. Other prominent personalities whose portraits he has made include the late Shah of Iran and Queen Farah Deeba, Prince Karim Aga Khan, Zahir Shah of Afghanistan, and Prime Minister Nakasoni and his cabinet, among others.
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The next to speak was Marjorie Husain, the doyenne of art critics in Pakistan. She had had a long association with the late artist and had written extensively on him. “There are so many good things to remember about them. They were always smiling. They were always affectionate.” She didn’t say much about him as an artist perhaps because she has not left anything that is noteworthy unsaid. She recalled the speech that Gulgee had made in 1989 at the inauguration of a seminar at the DHA library, where her lovely painting Iqra, casts a spell on viewers.
  
His portraits in oil on canvas were rendered in thick opaque paint, and at least two impasto images of the Quaid and Nur Khan adorning the lobby of a local hotel are easily accessible for an up-close viewing. For his works in pen and ink and white chalk pastel on coloured pastel paper he adopted a quick sketch technique of capturing a likeness with the barest minimum of strokes. In hindsight this trajectory of rapid mark making could well be an earlier manifestation of speed and swiftness that later matured into his characteristic action painting.
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Speaking at the end Javed Jabbar spoke highly of “the two inimitable personalities”. In one sense his was a welcome change from others in that when expressing regrets over the murders of the artist and his wife he remembered the poor maid, who just happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. (The one minute silence at the beginning of the programme was for the couple and, sadly, not for the maid).
  
In sharp contrast to this his lapis lazuli portraits were a laborious, nuanced patchwork of cut stone not entirely dissimilar to a jeweller’s technique of encrusting gems. One of his first lapis portraits, that of the late Aga Khan III, was made out of 6,000 pieces of selected, chiselled and polished stones. Others in this line included images of the Saudi Kings and Ronald Reagan. To date this innovative technique has not been emulated and stands out solely as Gulgee’s personal invention.
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On the Gulgees, he said they were gracious guests and warm and hospitable hosts. He claimed that behind the rough exterior of Zorro there was a kind-hearted person, who worked with zeal for the unprivileged at the SOS village.
  
There were other flings with mediums as he progressed into his genre painting and calligraphy phase. Mimicking the jewel like brilliance of Sindhi ‘Shisha Embroidery’ Gulgee often pasted tiny mirror pieces and speckled beads of paint on his canvases to create an effect of sparkling scintillating light. Lavish use of gold leaf in his calligraphies references album painting and Quranic illuminations. Today when new art is to a considerable extent about new media, such early experiments deserve a re-evaluation.
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“Gulgee had a pair of piercing and sharp eyes and his voice had unusually expressive qualities. It conveyed pain and pleasure alike in a highly eloquent manner. He was as articulate as his paintings.
  
Gulgee also brought new meaning to the use of the broad brush. He had become particularly adept at gauging contrasts and intensities of hues while loading his brush with multiple pigments. It was this intuitive balance that made his grand slashing strokes ripple and beam with a spectrum of exotic hues. In his later years his creative energy centred mainly on the joy of colour and the frenzy, whirl and calm he could enact with his brush.
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JJ, as he is commonly known, spoke about the amazing range of the artist’s subjects. “He drew a camel driver with the same passion as he did when he was asked to paint the head of a state,” said Jabbar, who was a friend of the couple for several years. He quoted the late Ahmad Parvaiz, an artist of no mean calibre, on Gulgee.
  
A prolific painter, his art was everywhere and a déjà vu of sorts had set in. Now with his passage the perspective is bound to change. Currently it is still possible to access Gulgee originals in the flesh. Soon the art market will take over and his paintings will join their ilk, the Chughtais, the Shakir Alis, the Sadequains and Ahmed Parvezes, etc. locked away in collections.
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“He was a model for hundreds of young artists, who were inspired by him, even if some of them never cared to acknowledge it. He had an inexhaustible reservoir of energy. Marjorie had quite rightly said, way back in 1999 that it was an exciting experience watching him at work. She had aptly described him as a dervish of an artist,” said JJ, much to the discomfiture of the lady sitting next to him.
  
A celebrity painter, Gulgee’s art was synonymous with the glitz and glamour that he had invested in his persona. Now that he is no more his oeuvre can be viewed and read independently. How will Gulgee fare on the anvil? A fervent exponent of modern calligraphy, a portraitist, an abstractionist, a genre painter and a skilled colourist, Gulgee gave his life to art. For a self-taught artist he clocked great mileage. But unlike the cerebrally challenged, innuendo riddled art of today, his paintings were ebullient, emotionally charged exercises in colour and rhythm.
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In the end the mike was taken to Gulgee’s relatives, admirers and some artists including Durriya Kazi and Nahid Raza. Nahid spoke in Urdu and the words came straight from her heart. That is Nahid Raza for you.
  
“I never intellectualise about my work,” he once said. “I try to paint with my feelings — the calligraphic form and movement that emerges is not predetermined or cerebral, it is intuitive and articulates something deep inside me.”
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=See also=
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[[Gulgee I]]

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Contents

[edit] Remembering a friend

By Ahmed Mirza Jamil

Dawn

Since I heard about the gruesome murder of my friend Gulgee, his wife and their maid, I have just not been able to reconcile with the ugly reality. When I think of Gulgee my mind races back to some time in the early 1960s. It all started when I was given greeting cards to print for Burmah Shell; the sketch of a camel-cart and its coachman done in crayons by a not-very-well- known artist who answered to the name of Ismail Gulgee.

In those days block printing was in vogue, where the screen could not be removed from the background. I was told that the artist was insistent that the screen should be done away with in the background but the shade of the camel cart should not be removed. I at once thought that the artist was a professional, which was why he had laid down that condition.

At Elite Publishers, we had just introduced offset printing but in those days there were no scanners. Colour separation was done more or less manually. I had bought a locally made wooden process camera to make films so I used that and the remaining work was done by hand, which was a painstaking and time-consuming job, demanding expertise. I had to do several experiments before getting the desired result.

The card was printed and the client was more than happy; shortly after the cards were delivered my secretary told me that one Mr Gulgee had come to see me. We had moved to the SITE (Sindh Industrial and Trading Estate) area, which was in those days considered a God forsaken place and people thought twice before visiting somebody there. I asked for him immediately. In fact I remember I went out of my room to escort him back.

Gulgee was profuse in his praise for the job done and I was impressed that here was a man who didn’t think that once he had handed over his artwork, his responsibility was over. We clicked from the word go.

From then onwards every time he designed something that was to be printed, he insisted that the job be given to me. His standards were high and it was a challenge to prove equal to them. I am glad that he was never disappointed.

Even during the period when I had taken a sabbatical from Elite Publishers, whenever a greeting card or a calendar designed by Gulgee was sent to Elite, I got involved in it completely.

With the passage of time we became friends. He was very reliable and sincere. When I was the district governor of Rotary Club and we were celebrating 75 years of Rotary International we decided to invite Prince Karim Aga Khan, who very graciously accepted the invitation. The question was what to give him as a memento. I had seen the portrait of the late Aga Khan’s done beautifully by Gulgee in lapis lazuli, so I suggested that we print that and then thought of doing a portfolio with a few sketches of the family members of the late Aga Khan. Who could have been a better choice than Gulgee to do the sketches — he was a sketch maker par excellence.

Time was short and the assignment was demanding, particularly since we wanted to do a quality job, something worthy of the great family. The one major plus point was that the artist and the publisher/printer were on the same wavelength. We were both racing against time, and were in touch with each other at least three times a day.

The portfolio was printed and both Gulgee and I felt ten feet tall when the Aga Khan liked it immensely and was generous in his praise. Prince Karim Aga Khan declared that he would display the sketches in his palace in Paris. In all, there were 12 sketches in addition to the reproduction of the portrait of the late Aga Khan done earlier.

If you look at the sketches, some of which appear in this issue of Gallery, you will notice that with few strokes and minimal lines Gulgee brought out the resemblance of the people he painted. There is spontaneity in his work, in other words it doesn’t come across as laboured. Another strong point is his drawing in black and white crayons on coloured backgrounds such as grey or bronze, which was not an easy thing to do.

His wonderful portrayal of midday sunlight reminds me of the works of Langhmer, a Czech refugee in India in the 1940s and I have a feeling that Gulgee might have been influenced by him.

Gulgee’s dedication to his work was just as astounding as his humility. He never talked of his achievements and what is no less, he never spoke ill of anybody. When somebody indulged in backbiting or gossip mongering, he remained quiet making it obvious that he was not enjoying the conversation.

We last met at the Japanese Consulate’s function to celebrate the Japanese emperor’s birthday. “Let’s get together and talk of the good old days,” he told me. He didn’t know, nor did I, or for that matter anybody else, that his days were numbered. May God rest his soul in peace.


[edit] Gulgee as I knew him

By Jalaluddin Ahmed

Human beings may be expendable; but what they have the power to create and leave behind could belong to another domain which is neither easy nor necessary to define: Iqbal alluded to it as the realm of the ‘Keepers of God’s secrets’.

Gulgee often talked about art as a journey, a pilgrimage, in search of a ‘there’ that unbeknown to us is also ‘here’, the continuation of an inner life, often no more than its visible externalisation. Last time we met at a friend’s house, our conversation turned to the Simurgh of Fariduddin Al-Attar’s Mantaq-at-Tair (Conference of the Birds), the 12th century epic in which 30 birds set out on a journey to meet their Lord and Master. The journey across endless deserts, mountains and valleys, ends in a ‘nowhere’, making them self-aware that they contain within themselves what they are seeking. (Si-murgh in Persian means 30 birds).

Yet, Gulgee was a man of the world, of this world, celebrating, portraying, enhancing life as perhaps only an artist can. He was a friend of friends, jovial and scholarly, soft-spoken but definitive, precise even when being expansive. His early initiation as a mathematician and engineer gave him skills and insights which stayed with him all his life. I remember the excitement tempered with minutely worked out details neatly spread on sheets of paper as he cheerfully manipulated one of the heaviest hand-beaten sculptures (approximately seven tons) which he had created for the Faisal mosque in Islamabad. As we discussed some of the calligraphic flourishes for the mosque’s pulpit and the niche, he quietly spoke of coming to calligraphy — or calligraphy to him — rather late in life. “I have taught myself how to learn, and I enjoy learning”, he said casually, almost as in a whisper to himself, and moved on.

I came to know him while researching for my book Art in Pakistan way back in the 1950s. At our meeting he mentioned having had his Honours in Engineering from Aligarh Muslim University in 1945 — it was a year earlier than my own brief stint there teaching English. “I am still an engineer, and not an unsuccessful one as careers go,” he confided with characteristic nonchalance, and added, “But my heart is in painting — has always been, and that is what I am going to do.” He did — and over the years gave painting itself new forms, meanings and dimensions.

The late Annemarie Schimmel, herself a mystic and one of the last century’s finest western scholars of Islamic art, paid him a fitting tribute, “Who would have imagined that an artist can create an amazing sculpture of a Quranic ayat in all the different calligraphic styles… I never forget my joy when I was confronted for the first time with the mihrab in the Faisal mosque in Islamabad, that enormous prayer niche in the shape of an open book, made of marble, with Surah ar-Rahman written on its pages in powerful golden Eastern Kufi, and the pages bound together by a magnificent mirrored ‘Allah’ in lapis lazuli.”

Gulgee was easy to get along with and we kept meeting now and again as he ambled through photography to drawing and painting, with exploratory forays into the third dimensional. He steadily matured as an astute painter of portraits. This also meant his frequent travels on commissions abroad, making him available to us back home less and less, mostly only ‘in transit’ as friends teased him. He brought back ‘stories’ of the high and mighty whom he painted, and the new mediums and styles he was discovering or inventing.

I recall one of his visits to Kabul, returning from there with child-like excitement about the possibilities of marble which he diligently studied and came to handle with the felicity, freedom and affection that would do credit to an artist as much as to a craftsman. He was also developing an interest in calligraphy and Islamic art, generally, reading a great deal about mysticism and its various manifestations in the East and the West.

At about this time my own career path took me away from Pakistan for nearly three decades, with only brief visits here once or twice a year. Our meetings were few and far between, until 1986 when he came for an extended visit to London and agreed to sit for a wide-ranging interview which we published in the journal Arts & the Islamic World. In it he forcefully argued, “The ultimate direction of art will be spiritual. That is the only thing which has depth and all the other reasons — Cubism, this ‘ism’, that ‘ism’ — are just pieces of whimsical nothingness. Very important in artistry of course, because the whole structure has been built around it, but ultimately man’s relation with God or with nature, or with himself — which is the same thing as man’s relationship with God — will extend the power of art.”

Gulgee was arguably the most prolific among Pakistani artists working in the decades of 1950 onwards, and it has often occurred to me that while he had his first solo exhibition in Stockholm as early as 1950, followed over the next few years by those in Ottawa, Tehran and Kabul, he did not have a solo exhibition in Pakistan until the late 1970s. Of course his work was seen in group shows and in situ on commissioned assignments, but apparently he was torn between styles and genres, experimenting and innovating, sketching on paper and grappling with bronze, making portraits in oil and in marble, creating emblems, murals, sculptures, and working with onyx and lapis lazuli.

It would appear that he ultimately opted for responding to the rhetorical question he himself posed in an erudite lecture sometime ago at the Aga Khan auditorium in Karachi, “How can man’s efforts be compared to the word of God?” Of course it cannot be compared to the word of God, but perhaps comes nearest to comprehending and embracing it!

The writer is Director General, Foundation for Museum of Modern Art (Fomma), Pakistan This page: Umra, 1974, Oil on gold and silver leaf on canvas Facing page: Gulgee in his studio

[edit] Flowers for Gulgee

By Quddus Mirza

Dawn

It was in his own museum where I saw Gulgee and his paintings, drawings and sculptures, with a number of students from NCA, when we paid a visit to the aging but highly active artist. Several young students — some for the first time in an artist’s studio — were shy to speak to a man who appeared to have emerged from the history of Pakistan art.

They were reluctant to ask questions, or request for a photograph with him, but amazingly it was Gulgee who took the initiative, gave a full tour of his museum, explained his works, shared his thoughts, laughed with us and urged the students to have pictures taken with him. His kindness, honesty and enthusiasm encouraged the young visitors to be close to him, and treat him as a grandfather-like figure.

Perhaps Gulgee enjoyed this role interacting with those who approached him, even if only to ask for work. For him making a human connection was more important than any thing else; so occasions he gave away his paintings as gifts. It was a form of sharing his creative achievement with others. This side of his personality was evident in the way he warmly spoke to students about the process and development of his art. A creative life that began in 1950, with his first one person exhibition held in Stockholm till his last days in Karachi, and produced abstract paintings, calligraphies (and combination of the two), portraits of important personalities, sketches and mosaics.

It will take some time to properly evaluate the real position of Gulgee in Pakistani art, but one must pay homage to his untiring energy that was responsible for creating innumerable canvases, with pure abstract imagery, and the name of God or the script from the Quran, composed in a painterly manner. With his work, in different dimensions and mediums, Gulgee demonstrated a dedication to his craft and visual concerns. That turned into an unmistakeable mark of Gulgee, which a number of artists tried to copy — or forge, but no one was successful.

The success of Gulgee lay in his scheme of capturing the moment through the loaded brush strokes. Although he acquired a distinct style (a kind of appropriation of abstract aesthetics), he never boasted about his own originality or his status in Pakistani art. Instead, like a genuine painter — he spent more of his time making art — despite all sorts of distractions and temptations to make money.

I recall an earlier meeting with him in his studio. I was with a friend who runs a private gallery in Karachi. With his usual smile, he welcomed us, showed his new canvases, but his interaction with the gallery owner was not professional at all. No discussion about pricing, gallery commission or other delicate matters about marketing his art took place. He was more interested in talking about the origin of his work, sharing his technique with us, discussing different aspects, taking us around his house — and basically charming both of us with his warm personality, soft spoken manners and sophisticated ideas.

Images of him, in his work clothes — taking us to different rooms, explaining his paintings and touching his mosaics — surfaced when I heard the terrible news. Even though we are living in a society where murder has become common one could not associate this kind of departure with a person like Gulgee. In that respect his death recalled that of another artist, Zahoorul Akhlaq, since both were murdered close to Eid — and in the last days of December. Besides the similar pattern of their deaths, the two artists had some other common characteristics, as both were respected and regarded as harmless, loving individuals — with no enemies.

If the death of Gulgee reflects our society, the life of the painter represents our culture. As in the words of Ngugi wa Thiong’o, art is an essential component of culture, because like a flower, which portrays beauty as well as contains seeds to regenerate the plant, art conveys aesthetic qualities and transmits the human experience. The art of Gulgee plays that role. His work, recalling abstract art in Pakistan, also suggests the efforts of our artists to imbibe influences from outside and to formulate personal expressions and an indigenous vocabulary.

Presumably this feature — transforming a mainstream art movement into a local context — made Gulgee the household icon and one of the most recognised painters of Pakistan. For a society that hardly cares about its visual artists, Gulgee was a familiar name and a much loved personality. On many occasions he returned the love and expressed his desire to donate his works to a national collection — a dream that has remained unfulfilled by his death.

[edit] Remembering Gulgee in different voices

By Asif Noorani

KARACHI: It was Gulgee’s bad luck that he was murdered shortly before the country’s most popular leader Benazir Bhutto was assassinated. His sad end somehow receded in the memory of his compatriots, more so because the tragic death of BB was followed by a reign of looting and destruction. But all said, Abdul Ismail Gulgee, one of the very few titanic figures in this country’s history of visual arts, certainly doesn’t deserve to be forgotten even for a while.

The FOMMA-DHA Art Centre rose to the occasion when under its honorary director Nighat Mir a memorial meeting was held at the beautifully restored barrack turned art centre. Zulfiqar Ali Lakhani, chairman FOMMA, was supposed to be there, but the man who wears so many hats may have been detained elsewhere. Conspicuous by his absence was FOMMA’s executive director Jalal Uddin Ahmed. He is these days in the UAE in connection with his latest passion -- the revival of the splendid journal Art and the Islamic World, which was once edited with distinction by Azra Jalal, when they were settled in London.

Nighat Mir set the ball rolling and did rather well when she said had she been able to communicate with the great artist she would have told him “Gulgee, your departure has left a gaping hole in the vast canvas of the art world, not just in Pakistan but all over the world.” She was right because artists and artistes of his calibre are citizens of the world.

A frail looking Amin Gulgee was there too. He spoke of his father and mother in a voice charged with emotions. “I used to call him dada, and my mother mama. They were great friends and I give them full marks for bringing us up, that is, me and my sister, as they did. They were so much interested in each other. They were best of friends. They were different in nature which is why they made a successful couple.” He dwelt on the ‘made for each other’ theme before he talked about the talents and the accomplishments of his father as an artist. At one point it seemed he would break down but he didn’t. Nighat Mir was holding his arm in support.

The next to speak was Marjorie Husain, the doyenne of art critics in Pakistan. She had had a long association with the late artist and had written extensively on him. “There are so many good things to remember about them. They were always smiling. They were always affectionate.” She didn’t say much about him as an artist perhaps because she has not left anything that is noteworthy unsaid. She recalled the speech that Gulgee had made in 1989 at the inauguration of a seminar at the DHA library, where her lovely painting Iqra, casts a spell on viewers.

Speaking at the end Javed Jabbar spoke highly of “the two inimitable personalities”. In one sense his was a welcome change from others in that when expressing regrets over the murders of the artist and his wife he remembered the poor maid, who just happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. (The one minute silence at the beginning of the programme was for the couple and, sadly, not for the maid).

On the Gulgees, he said they were gracious guests and warm and hospitable hosts. He claimed that behind the rough exterior of Zorro there was a kind-hearted person, who worked with zeal for the unprivileged at the SOS village.

“Gulgee had a pair of piercing and sharp eyes and his voice had unusually expressive qualities. It conveyed pain and pleasure alike in a highly eloquent manner. He was as articulate as his paintings.”

JJ, as he is commonly known, spoke about the amazing range of the artist’s subjects. “He drew a camel driver with the same passion as he did when he was asked to paint the head of a state,” said Jabbar, who was a friend of the couple for several years. He quoted the late Ahmad Parvaiz, an artist of no mean calibre, on Gulgee.

“He was a model for hundreds of young artists, who were inspired by him, even if some of them never cared to acknowledge it. He had an inexhaustible reservoir of energy. Marjorie had quite rightly said, way back in 1999 that it was an exciting experience watching him at work. She had aptly described him as a dervish of an artist,” said JJ, much to the discomfiture of the lady sitting next to him.

In the end the mike was taken to Gulgee’s relatives, admirers and some artists including Durriya Kazi and Nahid Raza. Nahid spoke in Urdu and the words came straight from her heart. That is Nahid Raza for you.

[edit] See also

Gulgee I

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