Monday, 28 December 2015

Bollywood is bigger than our local film scene but it's also impersonal, says Sonya Jehan



Being Noor Jehan's granddaughter, Sonya Jehan has had some pretty big shoes to fill from the get go. Perhaps that's why she'd avoided stepping into the limelight on home soil altogether, some assumed.
Until now.
"I don't think there was any conscious decision not to work in Pakistan, it just so happened that I was offered a very interesting role to play in India (she made her cinematic debut with Taj Mahal: An Eternal Love Story) and so I went there, ended up marrying an Indian. Now, I have a family there so I've done more work there since I live across the border now."
How does the so-called revived Pakistani cinema industry compare to the mammoth that is Bollywood?
"It doesn't compare. Obviously, Bollywood is much bigger but it's not as intimate. A lot of people that you work with there are working simultaneously on multiple projects so you don't really get the time to know people, other than your co-stars and director. On top of that, I usually have to fly from Delhi to Bombay, stay in a hotel. It's impersonal."
She adds, "Here, I work with a team that works and gels together like family and I go back home to my mother and my brother and have ghar ka khana. You don't do room service here."
However, even after all this time, Ho Mann Jahaan felt like an easy fit, explains the actress.
"I'd been away from Pakistan for so long that I didn't know much about the media and the cinema. When Asim approached me, it made sense for me to use this as the project to catapult me into unfamiliar territory because I've known him for a long time, we have that comfort level. Of course it helps that the script is so good and the character I was offered was that of an interesting woman."
Where does this interesting woman fit into the plot of a movie which has been hailed a coming-of-age story revolving around 3 university students?
While being careful not to give anything too major away, Jehan gives us some insight into the mysterious Sabina: "She's a very strong, mature, independent woman. She's extremely outspoken but at the same time, she's cool-headed. I'm not like that at all! I have quite a temper so as an actor, it was interesting for me, to play someone so serene."

I know Ho Mann Jahaan is going to do well and for now, that's what I'm excited about. In fact, I'd love to do another movie with Asim only!" laughs Jehan.


After having worked with bigwigs like SRK, Kajol and Soha Ali Khan, what was going through Jehan's head when being thrown into the mix with a crop of emerging actors?
"It was wonderful. It's a great team; so young and fresh, there's never a dull moment on set. Mahira is someone who's a total star, who's amazing at her craft. Adeel is just in his own world and he has these quirky, impactful one liners and quotes come out of the blue, he's a total riot. Sherry is the little boy next-door; bubbly and cheerful. it was a no-brainer for me, doing this movie."
She adds, "There was great energy all around, you know? I remember we sort of got stranded at the beach while we were shooting one day. Our tyres got jammed in the sand, we couldn't get out! That element of adventure and fun never wavered."
What's next for the doting wife and mother of two?
"I'm not someone who's a planner. I know the movie is going to do well and for now, that's what I'm excited about. If I get any offers after then I'd love to consider them. In fact, I'd love to do another movie with Asim only!" laughs Jehan.

Wednesday, 9 December 2015

I can't marry for 'a lot of reasons', says Hamza Ali Abbasi


There's more to Hamza Ali Abbasi than just politics and his deep concerns about protecting the morals of the nation.
Hamza Ali Abbasi also has a heart.
The actor/activist recently disclosed at a morning show that he "kind of [has] a soft corner for this one woman recently", but refused to reveal the identity of the mystery woman. He went on to flabbergast his legions of female fans and the nation's rishta-hunters by dismissing the prospect of marriage completely.
"Shaadi is a huge deal," he said, later adding that "I can't get married for a lot of reasons." He cited this as "the number one reason" for his break-ups in the past.
Gasp! Is Hamza a commitment-phobe?
He admits he's had quite a few relationships in the past, but not enough to fill "a juma bazaar".
"Women are very emotional... so they get disappointed that I can't marry them," he shared, talking about his failed relationships.

Friday, 27 November 2015

Here's what's hot and trendy at the Gul Ahmed Winter Clearance Sale

Winter is coming and it's bringing lots of sales with it!
One of the more exciting ones is the Gul Ahmed Winter Clearance Sale aka 'Epic Winter Carnival', which starts exclusively online today and in stores from Saturday.
The retail giant announced that an enormous range of products, from kurtis to bed linens, will be up for grabs featuring discounts as high as 70%.

Thursday, 19 November 2015

Full marks: TV drama Nazo portrays mental illness with sensitivity and grace

Mental illness is a topic that usually appears as a blip on our TV screens.
When a drama introduces a character with mental illness, it tends to veer towards sensationalism and/or crude depictions of 'abnormality'.
So, when a drama about special children tackles the subject in an even-handed, realistic manner, it is definitely worth taking note.
Nazo, which is currently airing on Urdu 1, is one such drama.
A girl suffering from mental illness, Nazo (Soniya Hussain), lives with her mother Tabassum (Atiqa Odho) and sister Samra (Zhalay Sarhadi). Taking care of Nazo has its own set of challenges, from her day-to-day care in the hands of able help to cordoning her off when visitors come home. Yet, they share moments of fun and laughter.

The story so far

Nazo doesn’t shy away from exploring the tensions of raising a mentally ill child right from the moment of birth.
Many mothers have to deal with the regressive attitudes of family and society at large, which tend to hold them responsible for giving birth to mentally ill children. This seeps into their psyche so that they end up blaming themselves.
Tabassum’s husband too taunts her until he dies in an accident, leaving Tabassum to fend for home and hearth.
Burdened by the demands of earning a living and taking care of both her daughters, Tabassum turns into a cold-hearted mother. Her raised voice and distant demeanor scare Nazo who has a near meltdown every time her mother is around.

Suffering from mental illness, Nazo lives with her emotionally unavailable mother Tabassum and caring sister Samra


Samra, sensing her mothers’ lack of affection towards Nazo, hardens towards her while trying to fill the maternal void in Nazo’s life. She believe that she has a lifelong commitment to her sister and associates this with the need to sacrifice everything for her happiness including the prospect of marriage.
Though during his lifetime Tabassum fought her husband over the idea of placing their daughter in a mental asylum, apparently she did send her away once, forever scarring her relationship with her elder daughter Samra. Though this was conveyed as a piece of throwaway dialogue, there seems to be so much unexplored territory here that I am crossing my fingers that Atiqa Odho’s character makes a reappearance to examine these ideas.
Atiqa Odho plays her part as the misunderstood and much maligned mother with incredible ease. It is a shame that her character isn’t afforded much of the nuance with which the others have been treated. There could be much more complexity to this role of a mother having to choose her work over care of her child as well as the tremendous guilt and social stigma such mothers have to face. Instead, Samra’s antagonism towards her mother for having chosen career and social commitments over her children seems to have a ring of truth.

Dysfunctional dynamics ground the drama

Atiqa Odho'a anti-maternal streak lends a different dimension to the mother-daughter relationships in Nazo – ScreengrabAtiqa Odho'a anti-maternal streak lends a different dimension to the mother-daughter relationships in Nazo – Screengrab
This tense and dysfunctional relationship between mother and daughter was actually the highlight of the first few episodes with Samra clinging on to her resentment by not bothering to tell her mother that Nazo was soon hospitalized after Tabassum left for a work trip to Dubai.
This kind of fraught relationship is welcome relief and a refreshing change from the cloying saccharine or unidimensional relationships we see on screen. There is an element of unresolved issues that serve to give us an insight into the characters and also create enough fission to keep the narrative going.
Later in the hospital, Samra is the lone care-giver for Nazo, which in turn piques Habeel (Ahmed Ali)'s curiosity about her situation. Given that boy-meets-girl scenarios in our dramas are a dime a dozen, it is to writer Samina Ijaz’s credit that none of these situations feel contrived. Also brownie points for not making them cousins!
Habeel’s genuine affection for Nazo wins over Samra. Despite her reservations and resolve to never marry, Samra sees Habeel as a way out of life under her mothers’ roof as well as possibly a new beginning.
Samra and Habeel are treated as adults making their own choices though taking life-altering decisions without so much as a conversation with their families was a bit much to swallow. Both of them throw their respective families into a tizzy by having Nazo stay with them, upsetting both Habeel’s divorced sister who lives with him and shocking Tabassum. Though here too, it has to be said that Samina Ijaz has a realistic way of handling her characters – they err and make mistakes, all too human mistakes and there is no judgement for what they do.

If there is one thing that Nazo gets right, it is the realism and authenticity of many of the situations that it portrays. There are moments of understanding, love and caring as well as moments of exasperation, helplessness and even anger at being forced into this situation


It helps too that both Zhalay Sarhadi and Ahmed Ali completely embody their roles. Zhalay love for Nazo is full of genuine warmth and affection and even at some of the scenes where she could go full tilt into melodrama, she comes across as believable and grounded and completely motivated by concern for her sister.
Ahmed Ali is a complete natural in front of the camera. While most men in our dramas are shown as a product of our patriarchal society, his Hadeel is refreshing change. A modern, well-rounded man who shoulders his responsibilities with dignity and patience, Ahmed Ali’s restrained performance is a highlight of this drama.

Realistic portrayals are refreshing

Habeel and Samra's marriage and baby complicates Nazo's lifeHabeel and Samra's marriage and baby complicates Nazo's life
As Habeel and Samra settle into married life, Samra still keeps her mother at a prickly distance ignoring her every overture. A hurt Tabassum decides to move to the US and away from her daughters. While Nazo settles into her new home, Samra’s pregnancy complicates her health and disrupts Nazo’s fragile balance.
If there is one thing that Nazo gets right, it is the realism and authenticity of many of the situations that it portrays. When Nazo disappears, Samra unleashes her wrath on Habeel for losing Nazo but conveniently forgets the time when Nazo slipped out of her own home on a rainy night.

Some may complain of the repetitiveness of certain scenarios as well as Nazo’s responses, but in caring for mentally ill patients a majority of time revolves around looking after their basic needs


It is easy to blame others and difficult to accept that these situations happen all too often. The tendency of disabled children to wander is one of the most common things that families have to deal with. The tension between Samra and Tabassum, the relationship with Nazo and Alia her full-time care giver, Habeel’s sisters reservations, the conversations between the help all speak to the very real ways in which each person reacts to and manages these situations.
There are moments of understanding, love and caring as well as moments of exasperation, helplessness and even anger at being forced into this situation. It is an excellent etching out of familial relationships that are all bound by differing degrees of expectation, commitment, love as well as annoyance and resentment.
Some may complain of the repetitiveness of the scenarios as well as Nazo’s responses but a majority of time and care devoted to the mentally disabled revolves around looking after their basic needs. Though, given that she has now cut herself on broken glass three times, the next person to serve her juice in a hand-cut crystal glass should be packed off immediately!

Kudos to the producers' vision and creativity

Nazo is an engaging drama dealing with issues of mental illness with a kind of sensitivity rarely seen on screen. Hats off to the producers Fahad Mustafa and Dr Ali Kazmi for touching on this important topic. The whole team seems to have really done their research which comes across in the writing as well as the performances.

Soniya Hussain as the protagonist Nazo delives a powerful performance. Everything from her physical mannerisms, stiff posture, to her genuine delight are played with conviction. Soniya Hussain is a wonderfully talented actress who seems to be constantly challenging herself


Soniya Hussain as the protagonist Nazo delivers a powerful performance. Everything from her physical mannerisms, stiff posture, to her genuine delight are played with conviction. Soniya Hussain is a wonderfully talented actress who seems to be constantly challenging herself and exploring a range of characters and that is helping hone her craft.
Nazo shows Soniya Hussain in a challenging role and she delivers a powerful performanceNazo shows Soniya Hussain in a challenging role and she delivers a powerful performance
Kudos too to the crew as well for such a polished product. DOP Faraz Khan creates interesting visual perspectives that serve to tell a visual story rather than for mere flourishes, as well as to the editors for creating a fluid and fast paced narrative.
Both director Aabis Raza and writer Samina Ijaz seem to be on the same page with regards deftly handling sensitive material as well as creating a taut narrative. There are also elements of a thriller when we suspect the worst of Farid baba while Nazo is in his care. Not cutting between Nazo’s whereabouts when she went missing heightened the tension between the characters as well as the audience keeping us guessing and engaged at the same time.
In the last episodes, things seem to be unraveling and fast. Habeel’s sister upset by her brothers careless remark leaves his home with her son. Samra, in the throes of a difficult pregnancy, finds herself getting annoyed and reacting to Nazo. With the birth of her baby and Samra facing the challenges of post-partum depression, things are at a turning point for all the characters and their relationships.
Sadaf Siddique is freelance writer, film and drama enthusiast and sometime drama queen not necessarily in that order.

Friday, 13 November 2015

These tough women show the world the 'soft' side of Pakistan


Spiraling through history, we’ve always boasted trendy, dedicated female figureheads; a Fatima Jinnah wielding political strategy in a crisp shalwar kameez or a Begum Liaquat Ali Khan resplendent in a traditional ghararawhile talking war strategies and meeting dignitaries.
Benazir Bhutto, the country’s first and only female prime minister cut a well-groomed figure and only recently, Maryam Nawaz spoke on the importance of women’s education in Washington, epitomising the Pakistani woman in an embroidered Maria B jora.
Moving away from politics and zoning in on the arts, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy is currently winning international accolades for her latest venture, eloquently titled Song of Lahore.
And how can we forget Sharmeen bringing home an Oscar back in 2012, winning in the Best Documentary, Short Subject category? She had worn a bespoke design by Bunto Kazmi and a KFJ gold cuff with a dangling diamond-encrusted Pakistan flag on her wrist and earrings by Sheherzad Rahimtoola.
More than her designer wear, though, it had been her acceptance speech that had Pakistan cheering and the world taking notice: “All the women in Pakistan working for change, don’t give up on your dreams, this is for you.”
From Malala Yousufzai to Bilquis Edhi, Maleeha Lodhi to Sheema Kirmani (and even Burka Avenger), an increasing number of Pakistani women are breaking away from traditional shackles and highlighting what is important to themselves or to their country. The fairer sex, certainly; but hardly the weaker.
Another case in point is Rabiya Javeri Agha who as Secretary to the Trade Development Authority Pakistan (TDAP) has lead quite a few delegations and organised Pakistani trade exhibits abroad.
Designer Maheen Khan, boasting a career where she has repetitively built her business through participation in international fairs and shows, mulls over the ignorance people often harbor regarding Pakistan.
“I am asked ‘How could you be from Pakistan?’” she says, “and I am happy to tell them about the many dimensions that define my country. At the same time, I find their ignorance bordering on arrogance — they don’t know about my country because they haven’t bothered to know about it."
"The world’s a global village and well-travelled, well-read people are generally aware of Pakistan’s burgeoning fashion fraternity and cultural strengths. The rest, hopefully, will get better informed with time.”

Friday, 6 November 2015

What went down at the Masala! Awards last night

Well, at least Mahira Khan has something to be happy about it!
The actress, who came under hot water for the controversial picture she took on Halloween, added a feather to her cap as she bagged the Best Actress award for Bin Roye last night at the Masala! Awards. The leading lady clad in an Eva Emanuelsen gown shared, ”In my own small way, I am representing Pakistani cinema here today on an international platform.." The grand affair, which happened in Dubai, is an annual celebration of the talents and achievements of the media community in the region. Last year, the event was attended by Fawad Khan and Humaima Malick, when the actor won 'Best Bollywood Debut' for his Sonam Kapoor starrer, Khoobsurat and Humaima picked up an honour for 'Breakthrough Performer (Pakistani Cinema)'.
Here's the low down on the rich and famous attendees:
Jacqueline Fernandez rang in three millions followers on Instagram and chose to bug Varun Dhawan about it.

Sunday, 25 October 2015

Item song alert: Meera appears in a poor man's fantasy for B-town comedy film


Meera seems to be following a new policy of secrecy.
After suddenly disclosing that she's directing a film, for which she's already shot scenes in Paris and New York, another project of hers has come to light.
Meera did an item song for the just released Bollywood comedy Bumper Draw. When did she sneak off to India to shoot that, we wonder!
She did pick up the Best Actress Award for her role in Hotal at the Delhi Film Festival, so maybe the makers of Bumper Draw thought they could cash in on her star power for their otherwise B-grade movie.
The item song, titled 'Lukkhe Baray Aate Hain', has been sung by 'Munni Badnaam Hai' singer Mamta Sharma, and features Meera grooving with comedian Rajpal Yadav. Watch the video here:
In Bumper Draw, Rajpal (as Farooq) befriends Sunderlal (played by Peepli Live actor Omkar Das Manikpuri) under some strange circumstances. Their situation gets complicated by the arrival of an elderly Parsi gentleman, and thus ensues a comedy of errors.
Meera's item song appears to be Rajpal's escape from his his sorry 'poor boy' reality — the song repeatedly draws comparisons between his fantasies about living it up and his actual lifestyle that falls quite short of his pipe dreams. In the end, the skimpily dressed Meera also ends up being a figment of his imagination.
Poor Rajpal! Who wouldn't want someone as wild and unpredictable as Meera to jazz up their life?

Tuesday, 20 October 2015

How Pakistani morning shows are keeping women 'where they belong'

Oh boy, I'm running late, my chai is still brewing on the stove, my stomach is grumbling ... these morning weddings, I tell you, they can create a sense of panic in the attendees.
You see, my favourite celebrity, who got married and didn't invite me, is recreating the events from her shaadi. I will watch with anticipation as she goes through all the rituals and traditions once again, just for the audience, just for me.
Lights, camera, dulhan!
If, at any moment, my level of interest drops, all I have to do is switch the channel ... to another wedding. For the uninitiated, let me explain.
Breakfast television in Pakistan roughly translates to bright blasts of energy with an overjoyed female host at the helm of affairs. She is the wedding planner, counsellor and gossip monger all rolled into one. So effervescent is she that in comparison, your own morning mood and 'moo' will appear as being hungover.
These morning shows cater mostly to housewives, a big part of the population that stays back home to bring up kids and build their identity around family life. They deserve as much respect as any other professional.
It is no mean feat to work tirelessly without much incentive or gratitude. Yet, most of them make for great managers: overlooking everything from birthday parties to funerals for as long as a lifetime.
A different kind of power resides with these women – they are the builders of society, preparing people you and I will have to face tomorrow, both professionally and personally.
However, with a fast-moving world, these women need to be exposed to more discourses of life to broaden their horizon, and television is one school they regularly feed from.
A simple google images search on 'morning shows' throws up visuals of revelry surrounding weddings-all from Pakistan only.
A.M. transmissions in the west tend to talk about traffic updates, community news and such. In Canada, people mostly tune in to watch the weather forecast to decide the kind of jacket they will wear that day.
Many channels and countless nonfictional shows in Pakistan remain religiously focused on keeping women 'where they belong': in front of the dressing table or in the kitchen, as is obvious from the plethora of cooking shows beaming across our screens.
The female audience of these shows has been tricked into believing they are learning something new each day.
The topics are limited and, even if a few programmes have tried to tread off the beaten path, they've all had to resort to doing their 'dulhan week' for the sake of ratings.
This subliminal misogyny by TV producers cannot be overlooked.
Over the years, a need has been created for such content through this method: offer a handful of options repeatedly and the audience will soon become addicted to the one which is the least worse.
The bridal industry generates huge revenues, judging alone from the presence of a parlour at every corner of our streets. The average fee that each of these salons charge for face decoration is pretty hefty too, so much so, that it is advisable that the father of a newborn baby girl open up a separate savings account for her right away, in order to cover the costs of hershaadi 'looks' in time.
And, perhaps, all that is justified too, considering how hard the Pakistani makeup artist has to work towards accomplishing the herculean task of painting a new face over the bride's existing one.
The artist is thus both, a plastic surgeon and a desi avatar of Leonardo Da Vinci. These makeup gurus are invited on TV shows frequently to display their talent. Thanks to the advent of private channels, our average homemaker has also graduated from knowing only Pakistani or desi Chinese dishes a few years ago, to adding Indonesian and Malaysian cuisine (amongst others) to her résumé.
The idea remains the same though: submit to your fate in the kitchen and channelise all effort towards pleasing your 'sasural' (in laws) through swelling their 'tonds' (potbellies).
Maybe, today will be my lucky day. Maybe, by some twist of fate, it will not be raining marriages on morning TV shows and instead, it will be the home remedies day.
A subset of which is weight loss day, which is really a misnomer because the last time I drank a concoction for seven days in a row, I lost nothing but my mind.
Maybe now they'll come up with a new way to feel bad about our bodies. Our hosts have been given the task of keeping women's minds from exploring anything beyond activities perfectly in line with our highly patriarchal society. Yes, they may dedicate a show to talk about the Kasur child molestation case, but only as an afterthought, not as precaution.
Rarely will there be a serious discussion on reproductive health, community service, tolerating the 'other' or human rights.
In a country plagued with as many issues as we have, it is imperative to empower the 'gharwaalis' so they, too, can evolve into independent thinkers, in order to add more value to a society whose foundations are shaky at the moment.
Morning shows get this invaluable two-hour window of opportunity every day, but they are hell-bent on keeping women in a perpetual state of giddiness, mirroring the emotions of a new bride. So, when the aunty from upstairs goes on and on about the new lawn print out in the market and how she will have to resort to robbing her husband's wallet for it, I am reminded of a Jaun Elia couplet:
Kiss liye dekhti ho aaina,
Tum tou khud se bhi khoobsurat ho

(Why do you stare in the mirror,
You are more beautiful than even yourself).

As for me, I will just let my remote find BabyTv, which still has more value for grownups than the inane circuses underway on our morning shows.

Friday, 9 October 2015

Revenge of the Worthless eyes January release

Tired of waiting for Shaan-starrer Yalghaar to materialise? Then, perhapsRevenge of the Worthless will be able to satisfy your appetite for explosions and sophisticated maar dhaar.
Jamal Shah's action drama has been confirmed for release on January 15, 2016, according to a post on the film's Facebook page.
The veteran actor/first-time director also confirmed the same over the phone to Images:
" Yes, the film will be released nationwide on the 15th of January. The film's plot is based on the days of the 2009 Swat insurgency. We selected some real-life events after some research, upon which the story is loosely based."
ROTW is a film with many plots, one of which is centred around the family of one Zarak Khan (played by Jamal Shah himself), whose family refuses to leave home during the war. Some characters meet a tragic end, so we wonder if the film has been framed as a comment on the consequences of war. The director prefers, however, to see it as a celebration of the heroism of our people:
"The film shows the deep commitment and sacrifices rendered to save our country, land and cultural narrative. The message conveyed by the film is positive."
"The most important thing in art is relevance," he continues, "In our current circumstances, it's this issue that has affected many, many lives and so is most relevant."
A scene from Revenge of the Worthless
Jamal Shah chose to cast himself as one of the main characters in the film, which doubles the difficulty of pulling off his directorial debut. But he puts it down as a financial necessity:
"It's definitely double the challenges of making the film. When when you produce and direct, you are forced to make the film feasible and cut corners. Instead of paying another actor, I decided to do a character I knew I can do justice to."
The cast also features Firdous Jamal, Ayub Khoso, Maira Khan, Imran, Tariq Jamal, Shamyl Khan and Emil Karakose from Turkey, whom Jamal sahabduring his shoot for a Turkish film.
Turkish actress Emil Karakose stars as Jamal Shah's daughter in the film
"She was interested in acting and coming to Pakistan, and there was a place in the cast for my daughter's role, so I cast her in that," he says.
ROTW was shot over a span of 42 days in the Swat valley, with some scenes in Peshawar and Islamabad.
It was initially slated for a May 22 release, but was delayed due to a system crash that caused the team to start the film's post production from scratch.

Blaming Sunny Leone: When politicians give green signals to rape

On a TV show discussing if child marriages are kosher, I realised I should not have been there in the first place. It was like discussing if waterboarding, maiming or beheadings were a laudable method of bringing societal change.
There can be no discussion when one party justifies violence of any kind using any stretch of excuses or beliefs; child marriages are violence.
Things quickly got worse, as they inevitably do on talk shows. A political party representative, a man, brought up Pakistani film actor Meera, and said he didn’t want a country where women like Meera defined standards of morality.
The speed at which men of politics mudsling women in the entertainment industry on any topic easily beats the time between food announcements at Pakistani weddings and what happens to the trays of korma and biryaninanoseconds later.
This is an increasingly recurring phenomenon in South Asia. One that recently resonated in the statement of a Communist Party of India (CPI) leader, who has blamed a Bollywood actor, Sunny Leone and her new contraceptives advertisement for the rising rape cases in India.
This is also a kind of devouring, an indulgence; the repercussions of which are dire for women everywhere.
For a country with massive overpopulation and under-poverty line existence problem for millions, it could possibly not be the condom ad he wanted an end to. For Atul Kumar Anjan, the target was Sunny Leone. Let us examine why.
Women who have complete command over their sexuality horrify men who make it their business to govern the general construct of society. Where men call the shots, make decisions on political and familial scales that have no input from women.
A sexually liberated woman is the embodiment of a vulnerable heterosexual male – it undoes false machismo, masculinity and above all, power. In his attempt to keep a second-to-none facade, his empire tends to crumble at the sight of her. It becomes a threat to the concept of a state and its social order.
Rape signifies a mala fide attack on the very concept of women’s sexuality; a putting in place so to speak. A tool used by men over centuries to settle feuds, wars, disputes and petty grievances.
It is criminal, if not absurd, to say that with advertisements like the one Sunny Leone appeared in, there is no bar on how many rapes happen as a consequence. This is like blaming the gas pedal for head-on collisions.
This downright refusal to acknowledge that there is a space between a stimulus and a reaction is the very basis on which civilisation after civilisation has built bloody empires.
This war on women needs to stop. This attempt to single out a woman, be it Meera or Sunny Leone, needs to be rejected in its entirety.
It is the very essence of a woman’s choice that is under attack, today it is sexuality and tomorrow, under its garb, it will be child marriage, divorce, inheritance, education and mobility.
Oppression is oppression under any new or shortened name. Tempting as it is to strike at the softest target, it is not measured, only disgraceful.
Even more so because the horror of the Delhi bus rape case has not washed off our memory. Nor have we forgotten the sexism it exposed in South Asian society when victim-blaming poured in about how she was asking for it for staying out late.
One would think the brutality of that rape would unfreeze any putrid rot of sexism from society, instead it only refined it, through politicians who tell people how to think.
No amount of perceived or deliberate provocation from a woman can absolve a man for a breach of consent in the act of rape. None. Ever.
This concept is difficult for many in South Asia to wrap their heads around but we can and should start by calling out politicians that deliberately flame the rape culture and glorify the crime itself by shifting the blame from the perpetrator to the victim.
It is the very passivity against these reckless statements that trivialises the dehumanisation of women.
Every girl child is coached to slouch, hide under covers, ignore gropes and eve-teasers and beware of the passions of men, who will after all, be men.
Well, it is time to expect men to be more than just invertebrates. Let us demand those that are not, to grow a spine.

Friday, 2 October 2015

Art mart: Other mixed media interventions

In the current climate of social and political chaos, negotiating states of fear, anxiety and suppression is common fare amongst artists. Injured, angst-ridden, brash or defiant, their art scores if artists bring singular aesthetic definition to their expressive responses. The recent three-artist exhibition at the Canvas Gallery, Karachi, “The Fine Line” affirms that singularity and novelty piques interest and attracts viewership even if the issues being investigated are familiar and have been addressed by countless artists as many times.
Of the three participants, Cyra Ali and Fatima Munir, both Indus Valley graduates, incorporate embroidery as a communicative element in their art. In a country with an intensive and extensive needlecraft history the term ‘embroidery’ immediately brings to mind the wealth of Kashmiri, Sindhi and Balochi stitch craft still widely practised today. But as a mixed media addition in cross disciplinary contemporary art practice embroidery, both machine and hand stitch, gains another life altogether.
Ali mixes needlepoint with acrylic as a feminine artistic device to illustrate her rebellion against conventional norms that inhibit women’s personal freedom. Her compositions, figurative or fantasy oriented are motif-based. She takes inspiration from the design / motif typical to print fabric and is partial to floral bouquet effects or repeat patterns. From afar the appearance of her canvases is that of patterned print fabric but up-close the motifs often reveal themselves as sinister, scandalous objects like arrowheads, scissors, etc, which speak of injury and pain as well as struggle, resistance and confrontation.

A three-artist exhibition explores deep psychological conflicts


Attractive and celebratory, her piece ‘Dil Bagh Bagh Hua’ is subtly underscored with a grasping voracious streak where tiny, lithe but menacingly rapacious fish swim in a sea adorned with multi-hued floral blooms and water jets. The imaginary garden tapestry ‘Sada Khush Raho’ painted and embroidered with thought-provoking motifs like scales of justice, minarets, garlands, garden path, religious mother figure, bridal couple and toddler pram is a satirical ode to blessings parents shower on newlyweds.
Critique by contrived deception — enacted through veiled differences in the macro and micro image — is a common contemporary art ploy, and Ali perks this strategy with her cheeky mixed media stylisations. Her raw and garish embroidered / painted portraits, ‘Heroine and Raat ki Rani’, bear the traits of personality profiles. There is originality in this approach towards portraiture and the artist should consider developing it further. Munir an artist, a mother and concerned citizen, counters the anxiety and insecurity associated with violence and instability by recreating images (ink jet print on canvas) of blown-up sites, wreckages, grieving humanity, ambulances and portraits of martyrs and saviours and then overlaying them with embroidery. Likenesses of Sabeen Mahmud and Parveen Rehman on canvas immediately connect the viewer with activism in a politically volatile environment. The artist valourises them with by surrounding their images with brightly coloured embroidered floral wreaths. By embroidering a wing next to the image of Abdus Sattar Edhi Munir portrays him as an angel of mercy.
Visuals of destruction are similarly treated with a light tracery of embroidered motifs. In traditional South Asian households needlework was once considered an important skill for young girls to acquire and Munir was trained in the craft at an early age. She associates needlework with the steadiness, peace and tranquility of those earlier years. By incorporating it into her art she spreads a veneer of calm and stability on an otherwise devastating image.
An NCA graduate / sculptor Umar Nawaz’s handiwork, an iron metal cylinder splintered with fractures and fissures, illustrates the magnitude or intensity of ‘pressure’ applied to rupture an otherwise inflexible surface. Likewise a metallic sheet of silver steel crumpled like paper is again a show of physical strength or forceful application whereby it is deformed from a smooth to a furrowed or wrinkled state. Such surface manipulations speak of physical sculptural treatments. Conceptually creation of material distress can also allude to imposition of mental anguish.
As a show it is artistry with mixed media interventions in “The Fine Line” that initially catch the eye but it is the deeper psychological conflicts hidden in the artworks that hint at the thin line between what the artist feels should or should not be.
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, September 20th, 2015