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Art teaches us plurality and diversity, says Aitzaz Ahsan at Jamil Naqsh's museum launch

Art teaches us plurality and diversity, says Aitzaz Ahsan at Jamil Naqsh's museum launch

The senator said he was present to celebrate a gifted Pakistani who sent out the message of a pluralist Pakistan
17 Dec, 2017

Art lovers thronged the relocated Jamil Naqsh Museum in DHA Phase VII on Saturday evening. The museum contains a rich collection of Naqsh’s artworks.

Senator Aitzaz Ahsan was the chief guest on the occasion of the museum’s inauguration. He said he was neither an art critic nor an expert on appreciation of art. He was there to celebrate the work of an amazing Pakistani who gave out an image of Pakistan that’s based on plurality of thought.

Mr Ahsan said two images stood out in Jamil Naqsh’s paintings: one is of the pigeon, and the other is of the woman. It reflected a deeper, more sublime aspect of our society. There was also a third image which he found very engaging: the eyes of the protagonists.

He said the pigeon was a bird of peace, of togetherness. Be it Piccadilly Square or Badshahi Masjid, pigeons bonded together, causing no harm, no violence to anyone. The second image of the woman was more deep-rooted. Thousands of years ago we were a matriarchal society, dominated by women. Women spread the message of peace, and it was in our culture, our poetry, where the urge to turn to the mother was found. In that context the senator quoted verses from Shah Husain and Asghar Randhawa in which the mother was invoked.

Mr Ahsan said the third image, of the eyes, engaged you and spoke with you. That speech [of the eyes] was nonviolent. The eyes that Naqsh painted not only looked at the world from the inside to the outside, but if you pondered on them you would notice that they were in fact looking from the outside to the inside.

Mr Ahsan said the important thing besides the three images was what distinguished human beings from animals, and the civilised man from the uncivilised man. They were three things: intellect, altruism and the aesthetic sense. Altruism also meant compassion, which was a faculty that we needed to develop in our world today. The aesthetic sense was to do with appreciating beauty … in art, in poetry, in nature, in situations that appeared to be dire. This is what we needed to adopt today as our values. We must use our intellect, altruistic motives and appreciate the beauty in others, because nobody is perfect. So the thing that art taught us was that there must be plurality and diversity.

After Mr Ahsan’s speech Dr Faridoon Sethna informed the guests about the new museum. He said though it was set up in 1999 and functioning for 18 years, it had not benefitted from a permanent and easily accessible location. The new location would add to the landscape of the city.

Originally published in Dawn, December 17th, 2017