I
arrive at Risham Syed’s parents’ house, off Sherpao Bridge to meet her for the
interview. She receives me at the gate and we walk into the house, past the
young boy playing Sitar, taking the
stairs to a room on the second floor. This being our first meeting, I introduce
myself to her. We chat about our experience of teaching and the conversation
slips into comparing NCA and BNU. We head to the laptop on which Risham shows
me some of her works, followed by a long and nonlinear discussion against the
backdrop of live classical music. She speaks softly and gently.
Risham Syed
needs no introduction. Her work has been exhibited nationally and
internationally at prestigious art venues, including The Harris Museum,
Preston, UK, Museum of Asian Art, Fukuoka, Japan and the Barbican Center
Gallery among others. Born and raised in Lahore, Risham received Bachelors in
Fine Arts from the National College of Arts in Lahore (1993) and a Masters in
Painting from The Royal College of Art, London, in 1996. She is currently an
Assistant Professor at the School of Visual Art, Beaconhouse National University,
Lahore. Her work explores issues of gender, class, power, history, inheritance
and violence through a striking assemblage of (art) historical allusions and
traditional and nontraditional artistic mediums and crafts.
The works
that she showed me, while we chatted, were from various periods of her artistic
career. We jumped right into talking about the use of embroidery and stitching
in her work.
Risham Syed: It was post 1999 I started using
thread and needlework, after I had Abdullah (her first child) – after looking
at those baby sets that I made when at school. You know, missionary schools
have this tradition of grooming the potential home makers.You learn needlework
at a very young age and when you are making these things you don’t even know
why. But later when you use these knitted or embroidered sets for your own
babies, you realize that you have been preparing for the moment all this while.
Rabbya Naseer: which school did you go to?
RS: Sacred Heart, Convent!
RN: interesting! so they made you do this
at a very young age?
RS: Yeah, like you began when you were six.
For example I found this tiny baby panty, my first hemming lesson that I must
have done at six – and the first cap I knitted, must have been at the age of
seven or something because I used to wear that in class 3.
While looking at the Line
Between series, she stopped at this particular panel and said;
RS: I was actually thinking of the Afghan
war. I was thinking of using the Afghan burqa.
But even at that time it was already overused so I didn’t want to bring it in
directly. The idea then was to hint at it and use just the particular blue
colour and a traditional motif.
RN: They strike to me as an interesting
replacement for the burqa or an
addition to our otherwise limited visual vocabulary when it comes to
representing women. But these are more like bikinis.
RS: These are tiny bikinis juxtaposed with
a traditional kurta motif. I think it had to do with the shirt as a covering,
how when you look at a woman, the embroidery on the shirt or even any kind of
garment is supposed to be decorative as are the bikinis. The gaze then filters
through the decoration on the surface that plays the role of ‘the skin’. The
idea behind this nevertheless was the burqa.
After going through a few more images, I stopped at Needle Work Lesson, 2002.
RN: I have never seen this work in person,
but I have been told that this is not a real pillow cover, the lace is made out
of newsprint, the quilting is achieved through gouache, the buttons and babies
are collaged. And I wonder, about the choice of medium. Of course there are a
billion ways to do ‘a’ work, but these are conscious decisions that one makes,
especially for a mixed media artist like yourself.
RS: Mimicking or imitating something is
also, I feel, an important part of my work, like when I copy classical
paintings, make a replica, and I do it in acrylics. That is also a conscious
decision, an act of representing these historically relevant paintings in a
certain context, in a certain way. It’s the same here. I didn’t use real lace,
you know the physicality of it. Somehow I felt that I needed to replace that
with something as disposable as newsprint and then this act becomes a statement
in itself.
RN: Also, one sees this as a highly ironic
and affective, tongue-in-cheek resplendency that distinguishes "low"
from "high" art or perhaps blurs the boundary between the two.
RS: I think the boundary is blurred in my
practice as ‘craft’ easily moves in and out in my work. I think this has to do
more with a more personal connection with embroidery. I’m not looking at it as
craft but as something that I’m taught, to make things beautiful around me!
RN: Interesting, because to be able to
paint well, to paint beautiful pictures is another Victorian gender code that
has been passed down, its important for a woman as much as embroidery and
stitching.
RS: Yea, the two small diptychs that you
saw (referring to the ‘Line Between
Series’) were also done with that intention. I juxtaposed two painted
‘landscapes’ with embroidery that I got done from a regular machine. The
pattern that I gave him to copy was from the foreign pirated pattern
books/catalogues. Because of the bad printing quality, the colours sometimes
turn out jarring or completely off. This then doesn’t look Victorian or
European, it actually became quite desi
(local), and then I painted around it, really flatly, on the cloth, so that the
embroidery became more like a collage. The stems I drew in pencil, as if it was
the negative of the embroidery. The lower half has the image of a launch of a
missile from the Afghan war, which is the ‘landscape’. Finally this is finished
with a henna stamp, as a final
validation, from an authority.
RN: I have noticed that there is always
this division, either vertical or horizontal within the painting.
RS: its funny that I’ve also thought about
this recently after all these years. Yea, I think whenever I have painted, I
have always thought about the three-dimentionality of the work. I like the
elements of the work to be in dialogue with each other. I’m trying to just analyze why I do that. I
think its trying to break away or extend the boundaries of a two-dimensional
surface, and also to bring in another context for layering or multiplicity of
interpretation.
RN: Even without the presence of this
physical division within the painting, there is always this double meaning,
sometimes in the contrast between medium and subject matter or medium and
imagery, merging seemingly different views, almost in dialogue with each other
yet totally independent, even contradictory, is it at times an aesthetic
decision or only conceptual?
RS: Yea, because I think it adds an irony
but then it often becomes aesthetic also in the sense that these (Line Between Series 1) could have been
pretty flowers, but they are quite ‘ugly’ and ‘pretty’ at the same time…
Pausing at Still Life (diptych made in 2007), Risham
explained;
RS: I made this for a show at National
Gallery, Islamabad, called Outside the
Cube. It was for the entrance, outside the gallery. You know, how each
entrance has these niches for the portraits of Quaid and other notable
personalities. So I made these two large portrait sized works, with plastic
grass and plastic flowers, and wanted hidden air-fresheners for artificial scent.
But at the end the administration didn’t care much about contemporary art, so
these two ended up as two panels on a wall, next to each other, and the air
fresheners were kind of lost in the space - whatever!
RN: so how do you feel about this new form
they took?
RS: I don’t know, the meaning changed. The
gilded frames were to give them that kind of value or position, which was
totally lost. It didn’t have that narrative anymore, but they did that to
almost all the works in ‘Outside the Cube’.
RN: But in that case, it would have been a
site-specific work, but now it has a life beyond that space/show.
RS: yea, I didn’t think about it then, it
was a total shock, and I didn’t care about the work’s life beyond that show,
because the show was called “Outside the Cube”. Taking it back on the walls,
into the gallery, defied the purpose.
RN: That defies the purpose of the entire
exhibition then.
RS: in a way, yes, wherever they could
find a space they just put up the works.
RN: So the gilded frame -You are one of the
first ones to start using them as a readymade object and since then there has
been a lot of followers.
RS: A whole lot of us, in the late 80’s and
then the 90’s at NCA were inspired by Zahoor Sahb, who broke the border, the format of the miniature painting.
He questioned it and played around with it. So the frame is coming from there.
Also when I went to London I saw these heavy gilded frames in the museums, I
was thinking of him and our concerns that are almost inherited. I link these
frames again to our connection with the Victorian history.
RN: Tell me about your experience at Royal
College.
RS: Going to London was an eye opening
experience that I wouldn’t have had if I had gone there at another stage in
life. The way it opened up new avenues for me, had to do with the kind of work
I was doing earlier on, which all of a sudden became totally irrelevant. Here
(in Lahore) I was using imagery from life and people around me and there, my
subject matter was lost. Lahore is an experience, the buildings of Lahore, they
are part of me. But then when you see London as an extension of Lahore or
Lahore as an extension of London, this whole colonial history and the
references, they open up so many questions and I think that was something I
experienced. This became a really strong content in the work, and embroidery
and my childhood, my upbringing, my environment, my mother, my experience of my
mother and her education, how she saw me and how she saw my upbringing, so all
of these things, I started thinking about them, projected onto my work. This
was something totally new for me.
RN: What kind of training did u have at
Royal College, was it very conventional?
RS: It was conventional in the sense that,
they wanted you to paint. They apparently gave you all the freedom, saying that
all these departments and facilities are for you but at the end of the day they
wanted paintings. There wasn’t much theory. Lectures were open but not
compulsory. So all in all it was a solid studio based programme.
RN: When we are in our home country, we
take certain things for granted, such as the subject of ‘identity’ but when you
are away, its hard to resist that, issues of identity become relevant almost
naturally, did that happen to you?
RS: I don’t know if I thought about
identity as such, but generally, I somehow became very angry. My course
director was aware that I was angry. This wasn’t to assert my identity, but
somehow it was something more personal that I was dealing with. It was strange
that through a historical perspective, I was talking about a rather personal
experience that was stemming from being away from home, Lahore! So may be in
that sense you can say that the element of ‘identity’ was there. Embroidery
came much later after I had Abdullah, but even then when I was at Royal College,
I was painting lace patterns etc which was a Victorian craft. At a conscious
level it was about composing present day with history through my personal
experiences. And I think I was more into proving my identity as a painter, and
was thinking of the lace my mother collected for my dowry and where that was
coming from historically and the pride she took in her collection.
When I was studying at NCA, initially I wanted to do
miniature, but Zahoor Sahib
said that I should do painting and learn miniature as a minor, learn the skill
etc. But the two remained quite separate in my practice till I went to London.
There I experienced infusing the spirit of miniature painting in my work. The
first panel that I made had tea washes. I threw paint on it, used old photographs,
stains, transfers. It was more like a diary. There was the context of miniature
and Lahore, colonial Lahore, my upbringing, everything together. Later I
gradually sifted through this and made many other works out of it.
RN: Working our way backwards, lets talk
about how it all happened, you becoming an artist, the journey? Also, I have
heard a lot about the weekly gatherings at your parents’ house, discussing
classical Punjabi poetry, presenting classical music, the absence of
television, the environment you grew up in, what role did that play?
RS: There was music all around me, always,
because my mother is a singer and my father is a poet, a government servant all
his life, but basically a writer. For him basis of their marriage was music. As
a child I had classical music around me in the house. I never painted and had
no connection with visual arts as such. Since childhood I had learned Sitar and Kathak. I did this with an
inclination of taking it up as a career. But a Syed girl couldn’t take up dance
as a career, so my mother thought that wasn’t happening. My father was all up
for whatever I wanted to do. I mostly I worked with Maharaj. I think I was 5 or
6 when I started, but living in Pakistan now I think there was not a lot of
potential in exploring that medium. People from NCA, artists, were all friends
of my parents, but my mother being a very conservative, strong kind of a
traditional woman, never thought that I would go to NCA, especially given the
reputation at that time. I ended up doing math and economics. Went to Kinnaird
and thought I would do my MBA. I was good at math, and before going to LUMS, I
had to do an internship so I was doing that when I realized that this wasn’t
what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. Incidentally I had a friend who
was preparing for the NCA test, and I ended up sitting with her through her
drawing sessions. Zahoor Sahib
was there, who encouraged me and so did my father. Somehow I picked it up very
quickly. So I think the pleasure I took in drawing was the deciding factor.
Every other day I would have someone sit for me and I would show my drawing to
Zahoor Sahib. Somehow my mother
did not resist it too much. I guess I wasn’t a 16 year old kid, I was an adult,
had done my BA. She took it with a pinch of salt but it was ok. My father I
know was very happy.
RN: What did going to NCA mean?
RS: I didn’t think, eventually what would
happen. Didn’t think of it as a career. But of course if I had decided to give
up LUMS, there must have been a reason. But how seriously I would pursue it, I
never gave that much thought. It wasn’t to brush up my drawing but to explore
something I enjoyed doing. NCA was to explore and that was the ultimate goal. I
think MA at Royal College was to pursue art professionally.
RN: So at that time, what did it mean to
be an artist, like what did it mean to be doing this for the rest of your life?
RS: I don’t know. It’s been a question.
When you know you are an artist what do you expect from yourself? That is the
question. You make work which is critical of the system. But then buying and
selling comes in. Like when I came back after MA, I thought it was ridiculous
to sell work. The first time I had my paintings up as part of a show, at NCA
gallery. I did these mixed media small works, and somebody asked me for the
price and I was like how do you sell work. Maybe you can just take it or
whatever. But they insisted, so I said ok, you can pay me for the framing, and
they ended up paying me Rs.1500 for the framing. That was the spirit. Then you
have these discussions with friends and it’s a whole long debate. You critique
the system in your work and you become a victim of it by selling your work. The
selling aspect does change a few things, and now students sell their works even
before they step out of college. On the other hand if you don’t sell your work
what do you do with it? I have never been able to price my work, its quite
absurd and tough.
RN: So how do you handle the business side
of it then?
RS: I don’t, which is why I don’t sell a
lot of work. The galleries that I have shown with, handle it.
RN: Also, what role does this kind of
recognition, not the selling aspect but the fact that you are an international
artist, who has shown at museums, what does that do for you?
RS: That is again a question. I try not to
think of the ‘international’ part. As an artist one feels one is connected with
the process of art making even if one is not physically producing work.The fact
that I am self critical also sometimes becomes a hinderence. I think that’s the
reason why everyone tells me that I’m not very ambitious. My friends think I’m
not ambitious enough because I don’t go all out to do business in the sense of
marketing etc. I tend to think too much about my concerns and what happens to
the work eventually!
RN: So
what is art making to you, of course it’s a language, making sense of the world
we live in, its self expression and all but what does it mean to make art, for
you?
RS: Critiquing the world that we live in.
RN: So it is important that it reaches a
larger audience?
RS: of course.
RN: We live in an age where marketing your
work, not just in terms of selling but making it available to masses seems
important, everyone has websites, you don’t.
RS: yea, I’m thinking about it. Often when
I look at other artists’ websites, they seem mechanical in format. But of
course its essential. Its important to make work accessible. But then it is
accessible through other means as well…so lets see.
RN: Your work is more than often written
about as feminist, of course autobiographical introspection is a primary source
for art making, so being a woman any work one makes could be termed ‘feminist’,
but do you personally consider yourself a feminist artist, is it intentional?
RS: I don’t think about the ‘ism’ part as such,
but of course I’m thinking of the woman, her role in society, how one is looked
at, those things are there. But I’m not thinking about feminism as such. Its
more to do with personal experience.
RN: Your work is so informed by your
immediate environment, I wonder why technology, which is such a major part of
the present times, is slightly missing?
RS: I have been thinking about that for
some time now…technology and accessibility of work. Even though I’m not
somebody who finds gadgetry hard to use, may be mentally I’ve not yet taken a
decision? There is definitely a block there, but film or video is something I’m
interested in.
RN: And how does your career as a teacher,
inform your practice?
RS: I often think how I would function as
an artist if I were not teaching. It’s the connection with the new psyche, new
ideas. You remain active, connected, learn a lot. Teaching for me is more of an
interactive two way thing.
RN: Tell me about the Lahore 2010, exhibited at Rohtas, its very different?
RS: Well the trendy house, ideal house,
has been a recurring feature. The house I grew up in, was over a hundred years
old. So I lived in an old house without a television (because my father thought
we could be more productive without it). How you explain that to friends? My
father never learned to drive so every morning going to school the question
would be ‘do we would take a bus or tonga’?
So may be the ideal home thing is coming from there. Its tongue-in-cheek. Now
the new residential schemes in Lahore have houses that have their façades
finished, with the three unfinished sides. That is because eventually the three
sides will have other houses covering them. I thought it was a great
representation of the psyche of the people. Did you see the show?
RN: I
did and I loved the cemented wall. But I remember asking myself, if the
paintings were on the other walls and the cemented wall was bare. Or how would
I respond if there was no cemented wall, because the paintings themselves are
clearly what they are, representing the photograph, and the new Lahore, that is
being built by running over the old mansions in Model Town and Gulberg, but the
presence of the wall definitely worked.
RS: yea, but I’m still thinking of a
solution for the wall, because the wall itself was nice and I thought it was a
work on its own, but I don’t want the wall as a prop as such and want the
paintings to stand on their own. I was clear about the fact that I didn’t want
the paintings to be on the white walls. These were intended as postcards.
Painting is also a way of possessing these ideal homes and these are small,
handy and convenient to carry.
It was only after Risham’s daughter started to get
impatient, that I realized that it had been two and a half hours already.
RN: I think I must take leave now – Thank
you very much for your time – sadly, there is so much more that we didn’t speak
about - I think it needs more than one such session for all of this to be
collated – Thank you one again.