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Karachi Biennale CEO urges Sindh govt to set up a contemporary art museum in Karachi

Karachi Biennale CEO urges Sindh govt to set up a contemporary art museum in Karachi

Niilofur Farrukh believes such a museum will cement Karachi's position as a cosmopolitan art city.
11 Nov, 2024

The Fourth Karachi Biennale ended with a special closing ceremony at the historic City Council hall with a pledge to continue to bring art and people together in public spaces.

The closing, attended by artists, institutional heads, and prominent citizens, was a special event that brought the iconic Jamshed Nusserwanjee Building (former KMC building) and its history into focus. This landmark was built in the 1930s. A short presentation highlighting the importance of the venue was shown.

Speaking on the occasion, Niilofur Farrukh, the managing trustee of the Karachi Biennale Trust and CEO of Karachi Biennale, said, “I want to thank the citizens of Karachi who came out in large numbers to visit the Fourth Karachi Biennale, particularly the youth, and also all the 40 artists from Pakistan and other countries, for their enriching interpretation of the theme Rizq/Risk.”

She said: “The interest and engagement with art in the public space is very reassuring. I feel the citizens and government of Sindh should seize this opportunity to set up a Karachi Contemporary Art Museum, which could be housed at any one of the numerous underused heritage sites.

“This museum will acknowledge the creative talent and vibrancy of the people. Karachi Biennale has put our city on the world art map and a contemporary Art Museum will consolidate its position as a cosmopolitan art city,” she added.

The curator of KB24, Waheeda Baloch also spoke on the occasion and shared her experiences.

Swedish Artist duo, Lundhal and Seital, received the KB24 Performance Art, while the second award presented during the evening was for the most outstanding work at the KB24 collateral exhibition, Artists of Gaza Live in Our Heart.

The latest edition of Karachi Biennale closed its doors after a successful two-week run. Tens of thousands of school and university students engaged with the artworks of 40 artists from 10 countries.

In her vote of thanks, Biennale trustee Shanaz Ramzi thanked Mayor Murtuza Wahab and his office and Culture Minister Syed Zulfiqar Ali Shah for generously opening public venues for the event.

Originally published in Dawn, November 11th, 2024

Comments

Dr. Salaria, Aamir Ahmad Nov 11, 2024 02:54pm
Great move and good news.
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Tahmad Nov 11, 2024 04:58pm
Simply a great idea, hopefully Sindh government will act quickly.
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Ehsan Nov 11, 2024 07:12pm
Govt should encourage and develop activities that lead to people’s intellectual development, museums, libraries/ community centers etc can be part of it
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Laila Nov 13, 2024 01:32am
@Dr. Salaria, Aamir Ahmad No, this is not worse than what happened under Hitler/Nazis. Clearly you don't know much about the atrocities or history of WW II, where 6 million Jews were murdered. Lamp shades made out of skin. Experimental "medical" surgery, organs/limbs removal without anesthetics. Rapes. Torture. Gas chambers. Forced labor camps. Starvation. Ironically, the then grand mufti of Palestine visited Hitler and Muslims serving in Hitler's Nazi army. It's distasteful that you deliberately pick the worst to happen to Jews, to make a baseless comparison just to downvalue their suffering. Even now many wars are worse than Palestine, but no media coverage. Just stick to the topic and don't undervalue the pain of others (or just Jews). It's not a competition of who suffers more or less. The only difference is the Palestinian war is covered 24/7 in digital age. Past wars didn't have that benefit. It's like no other people, except Palestinians, matter. Don't be selective.
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