Jamil Naqsh (B. 1939)
Property from a Private Collection, Washington D.C.
Jamil Naqsh (B. 1939)

Untitled (Woman with dove)

Details
Jamil Naqsh (B. 1939)
Untitled (Woman with dove)
signed and inscribed 'Jamil Naqsh, Pakistan" (vertically lower left)
oil on canvas
33¾ x 24in. (85.7 x 61cm.)
Provenance
Acquired directly from the artist's private collection in 1973, Karachi, Pakistan.

Lot Essay

The reclusive Jamil Naqsh is one of Pakistan's most celebrated living artists. Born in Kairana, in the Uttar Pradesh province of India, his early childhood was marred by his mother's death at the age of five and by the wrenching effects of the 1947 Partition on his family. He was separated from his father, who stayed behind in India and whom he never saw again. Influenced by his childhood memories of Kairana as a centre for classical music, Naqsh gravitated towards the arts and studied at the Mayo School of Art under the Modern miniaturist, Ustad Mohammad Sharif. Though not technically working in a miniature format, his training led him to choose calligraphy and figuration as his leitmotif. Focusing the subject of his oeuvre on the nude, the horse and the pigeon, the latter taken from the symbolic language of miniatures, Naqsh's love for the female form was particularly inspired by his companion and muse of 35 years, Najmi Sura. The pigeon or dove serves as both a poignant memory of the birds that used to fly through the windows of his ancestral home and a symbol of love, as messengers of romantic missives. In this early work, Naqsh delicately manipulates impasto and paint layers to create a remarkable surface texture that allow the figure to shimmer in and out of representation.

More from South Asian Modern + Contemporary Art

View All
View All