Shahzia Sikander Explained

Shahzia Sikander
Birth Place:Lahore, Pakistan
Alma Mater:National College of Arts Lahore, Rhode Island School of Design
Known For:Visual Art, Contemporary art
Awards:MacArthur Fellowship
Website:http://www.shahziasikander.com/

Shahzia Sikander (born 1969, Lahore, Pakistan) is a Pakistani-American visual artist. Sikander works across a variety of mediums, including drawing, painting, printmaking, animation, installation, performance and video. Sikander currently lives and works in New York City.

Education

Sikander studied at The National College of Arts Lahore in Pakistan, where she was taught the traditional discipline of Indo-Persian miniature painting.[1] She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1991.[2] Sikander moved to the United States and attended the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), earning a Master of Fine Arts in Painting and Printmaking in 1995.[3] [4]

Early work

As an undergraduate student in Lahore, Shahzia Sikander studied the techniques of Persian and Mughal Indo-Persian manuscript painting, often integrating traditional forms of Mughal (Islamic) and Rajput (Hindu) styles and culture.[5] The traditional form of miniature painting requires equal measures of discipline, gesture and expression in order to execute a careful layering of color and detail. Compositionally, miniature paintings exhibit an extensive display of colorful imagery, including human forms, animals, patterns, shapes, dots and connecting lines. Miniature paintings often engage in contextual complexities such as religious narrative, scenes of battles and court life. Sikander has integrated the techniques and forms of traditional miniature painting, relying on the layering of images and metaphor to drive her work. Her forms and figures exhibit a quality of continual morphing as transparent imagery is layered, providing a complexity with endless shifts in perception. Sikander's complex compositions "dismantle hierarchical assumptions and subverts the very notion of a singular, fixed identity of figures and forms."[6]

The Scroll, 1992, is a semi-autobiographical manuscript painting. The Scroll Sikander's thesis project at the National College of Arts, includes formal elements of historical manuscript painting.[7] The Scroll portrays scenes of everyday contemporary Pakistani life, including rituals that explore cultural and geographic traditions.[7] Many hues, patterns and incidents appear in The Scroll, identifying Sikander's attention to small detail, muted color palettes, and understanding of architectural elements juxtaposed with the intimacies of domestic culture.[7] The use of perspective is increasingly noticeable, exhibiting a linear movement of composition.[8] Common concerns of economics, imperialism, colonialism, sexualism and identity are also apparent in Sikander's early paintings. The Scroll launched what has come to be called the neo-miniature.[9]

Sikander's attention to detail and formalism assist in the contextualization of her miniature paintings, stemming from an interest in labor, process and memory. Earlier paintings also include elements of Gopi, or the cowherd female devotees and lovers of the deity Krishna in Hindu mythology, while figures of men are depicted as "turbaned warriors."[10] The Gopi is portrayed in Sikander's early miniature paintings to "locate visual and symbolic forms within miniature painting that have the potential to generate multiple meanings."[11] Shahzia Sikander's most significant use of Gopi can be seen in a series of drawings and digital animation from 2003, titled Spinn. In the animation, the characters multiply and their hair separates from their bodies, creating an abstracted form of hair silhouettes. Sikander explores the relationship between the present and the past, including the richness of multicultural identities. Appropriations for Sikander function to move Indo-Persian artistic traditions into the future. The extraction and abstraction of traditional motifs create endless shifts in perception that challenge the linearity of any colonial or postcolonial narrative. Integrated with both personal and social histories, her work invites multiple meanings, operating in a state of constant flux and transition.[12]

Digital animation

Similarly to her miniature paintings, Sikander relies on the process of layering to create digital animation. Formal elements of technique, layering and movement of the digital animations help to unhinge the "absolute of contrasts such as Western/non-Western, past/present, miniature/scale." Sikander explains her appreciation for the process of layering in digital animation, allowing the narrative to remain suspended and open for reinterpretation. Sikander is very patient with her work, some taking months, even years to finish. Sikander states; "The purpose is to point out, and not necessarily define. I find this attitude a useful way to navigate the complex and often deeply rooted cultural and sociopolitical stances that envelop us twenty-four hours and day, seven days a week."[13]

Performance art and installations

As a female Muslim artist, Shahzia Sikander often had to endure stereotyping among her community. The veil (a scarf often worn by Muslim women) covers the hair and neck and is symbolic of both religion and womanhood. Sikander's miniature paintings often refer to the veil, exploring her own religious history and cultural identity. In a performance piece, Sikander wore an elaborate lace veil for several weeks while documenting the reaction of her peers. Sikander explains that the veil gave her an ultimate sense of security, stating that, "It was wonderful to not have people see my facial or body language, and at the same time be in control and know that they did not know I was acting, and checking their reaction."[14]

Imagery of the traditional Muslim veil occur throughout Sikander's compositions. Her larger works are reminiscent of a centuries-old Indian practice in which women regularly paint figures all over the walls and floors of their houses, using "whole body" gestural movements. Sikander uses large drawings as the basis for her large-scale installations, often requiring months to complete. Nemesis, a site-specific installation at the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, features a jewel-like paintings as small as six by eight inches and two animations.[15] Sikander was commissioned to create two large public art pieces for Princeton University, which were revealed in 2017. One is Quintuplet Effect, a painting on layered glass which can be seen in the Julis Romo Rabinowitz Building. The other is Ecstasy as Sublime, Heart as Vector, a sixty-six-foot-tall mosaic in the Louis A. Simpson International Building.[16]

Sikander places a strong emphasis on feminist messaging in her artwork, often using it as an avenue to initiate discussions surrounding religion and politics. As a muslim woman living in New York in the midst of the aftermath of 9/11, Sikander made note of the growing interest in middle eastern women and islam in the west through her art.  In Pleasure Pillars, Sikander makes a clear reference to the destruction of the twin towers in 2001 as the women in the painting are depicted shooting beams and creating explosions.[17] Throughout her portfolio, she depicts women with incomplete bodies and mythological features, such as horns. This can also be seen in her mural, The Perennial Gaze, in which the woman is embraced by a gold, androgynous, headless body. Sikander utilizes the human body to push the boundaries between what is praised as masculine and feminine, highlighting the sensual qualities of the female form and how it is often overshadowed.

In 2023, Sikander was commissioned to create a statue for Madison Square in New York. In this installation, a statue of a golden armless floating woman with ram horns is held up by a skirt covered in a mosaic. This installation,  “Havah ... .to breathe air, life,” received a mixture of praise and criticism from viewers as the United States continues to be in a legislative battle on women’s reproductive rights, specifically abortion rights. This sculpture is interpreted to be in conversation to female reproductive rights from the title. Havah has two meanings, in Urdu it translates to air or Eve. Coupled with the allusions of the woman’s body connected to nature, many viewers interpret the sculpture in relation to female reproduction as the female body is understood as the vessel of human life. In an interview Sikander refers to Eve as “the first law breaker,”[18] though she shares no clear political affiliation or opinions on the topic in particular. Rather, Sikander created the sculpture to start a conversation and have the meaning reveal itself, as she explains she “thrive[es] on hearing what happens over time.”[18] The sculpture, Witness, was later relocated to the University of Houston, where it drew criticism from the anti-abortion Christian group Texas Right to Life.[19] Sikander stated that viewers may have "misread the symbolism behind her artwork, which includes hornlike braids, tentacle arms and a lace collar. Her intention was not specifically to comment on abortion or Supreme Court justices, but rather to create a broader message about a woman’s power in the justice system". In July 2024, the sculpture was vandalized and beheaded.[20]

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Select solo exhibitions!Year!Name!Location!Type!Notes
1993Pakistan Embassy, Washington, D.C., United StatesGovernment gallery[21]
1996Art Celebration 96: Shahzia SikanderBarbara Davis Gallery, Houston, Texas, United StatesGallery
1996Knock Knock Who's There? Mithilia, Mithilia Who?Project Row Houses, Houston, Texas, United StatesNon-profit gallery
1997A Kind of Slight and Pleasing DislocationHosfelt Gallery, San Francisco, California, United StatesGallery
1997Murals and MiniaturesDeitch Projects, New York, New York, United StatesGallery[22]
1998Shahzia Sikander: Drawings and MiniaturesKemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, Missouri, United StatesMuseum
1998Shahzia SikanderThe Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United StatesCollege gallery[23]
1999Directions: Shahzia SikanderHirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C., United StatesMuseum
2000Shahzia Sikander: Acts of BalanceWhitney Museum of American Art at Philip Morris, New York, New York, United StatesMuseum[24] [25] [26]
2001IntimacyArtPace, San Antonio, Texas, United StatesNon-profit gallery
2003SpiNNBrent Sikkema, New York, New York, United StatesGallery
2003Drawing to DrawingHosfelt Gallery, San Francisco, California, United StatesGallery
2004Contemporary Links: Shahzia SikanderSan Diego Museum of Art, San Diego, California, United StatesMuseum
2004Shahzia Sikander: Flip FlopSan Diego Museum of Art, San Diego, California, United StatesMuseumThis was a three-part installation.[27]
2004–2005Shahzia Sikander: NemesisAldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut, United StatesMuseumorganized by Ian Berry and Jessica Hough
2004Shahzia Sikander: NemesisThe Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York, United StatesMuseum[28]
2005–2006Shahzia Sikander: NemesisPérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM), Miami, Florida, United StatesMuseum[29]
2005Dissonance to DetourOtis College of Art and Design, Los Angeles, California, United StatesCollege gallery
200551 Ways of LookingBrent Sikkema New York, New York, United StatesGallery
2005Shahzia Sikander: New WorkSikkema Jenkins & Co. New York, New York, United StatesGallery
2006Shahzia Sikander: Solo ExhibitionThe Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United StatesMuseum[30]
2007Shahzia SikanderIrish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA), Dublin, IrelandMuseum[31]
2007–2008Shahzia SikanderMuseum of Contemporary Art, Sydney (MCA), AustraliaMuseum[32]
2008Intimate AmbivalenceIKON Gallery, Birmingham, United KingdomGallery
2009StalemateSikkema Jenkins & Co. New York, New York, United StatesGallery
2009Shahzia Sikander Selects: Works from the Permanent CollectionCooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. New York, New York, United StatesMuseum[33]
2009Shahzia Sikander: 'I am also not my own enemy'Pilar Corrias, London, United KingdomGallery[34]
2011Shahzia Sikander: The Exploding Company Man and Other AbstractionsWalter and McBean Galleries, San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, California, United StatesCollege galleryCurated by Hou Hanru[35] [36]
2011Shahzia Sikander: The Exploding Company Man and Other AbstractionsBakalar & Paine Galleries, MassArt, Boston, Massachusetts, United StatesCollege galleryCurated by Hou Hanru
2014Shahzia Sikander: ParallaxBildmuseet, Umeå University, Umea, SwedenCollege gallery"Shahzia Sikander: Parallax" was first shown at this location, a multichannel video animation with original score.[37]
2015Shahzia Sikander: ParallaxGuggenheim Museum Bilbao, SpainMuseuma multichannel video animation with original score[38]
2016Shahzia Sikander: Ecstasy As Sublime, Heart As VectorMAXXI, Rome, ItalyMuseum[39]
2021Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary RealitiesMorgan Library & Museum, New York, United StatesMuseum[40]
|2021-2022|Shahzia Sikander: Unbound|Jesus College West Court Gallery, Cambridge, United Kingdom|Museum|[41] |}

Group exhibitions

Select group exhibitions!Year!Name!Location!Type!Notes
1994A Selection of Contemporary Paintings from PakistanPacific Asia Museum, Pasadena, California, United StatesMuseum
2002time/frameJack S. Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, United StatesCollege museum[42]
2002Drawing Now: Eight PropositionsMuseum of Modern Art, Queens, New York, United StatesMuseum[43]
2005Fatal Love: South Asian American Art NowQueens Museum of Art, Queens, New York, United StatesMuseum[44]
2006Dirty Yoga: The Fifth Taipei BiennialTaipei Biennial, Taipei, TaiwanBiennial[45]
2007Global FeminismsElizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, New York, United StatesCollege museumFeminist art work from 1990 and onward, created in various art media including sculpture, painting, drawing, photography, video, installation, and performance.[46] [47]
2007Global FeminismsDavis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts, United StatesCollege Museum[48]
2007Not For SaleMoMA PS1, Long Island City, New York, United StatesMuseum[49]
2008Order. Desire. Light: An Exhibition of Contemporary DrawingsIrish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA), Dublin, IrelandMuseum[50]
2009Compass in Hand: Selections from the Judith Rothschild Foundation Contemporary Drawings Collection,Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), New York, New York, United StatesMuseum[51]
2009Moving Perspectives: Shahzia Sikander and Sun XunSackler Gallery, The Smithsonian, Washington D.C., United StatesMuseum[52]

Awards and fellowships

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pakistani Art School Trains the Next Generation of Miniaturists. Jennifer. Noémie. 2015-11-23. Creators. Vice. en-us. 2017-07-09.
  2. News: Shahzia Sikander, Pakistani-American, born 1969. Diane Villani Editions. 2017-07-09. en-US.
  3. Web site: Events: Gail Silver Memorial Lecture, Shahzia Sikander. 2016-10-01. RISD Museum. Rhode Island School of Design. 2016-10-17.
  4. Web site: TLAD Artist's Talk: Shahzia Sikander. RISD Academic Affairs. 9 April 2014 . Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). 2018-12-30.
  5. Web site: Shahzia Sikander. https://web.archive.org/web/20081015175932/http://www.crownpoint.com/artists/206/about-artist. dead. 15 October 2008. About the Artist. Crown Point Press. 10 June 2015.
  6. Web site: Stich. Sidra. Shahzia Sikander @SFAI. Review. Square Cylinder.com. 14 October 2012. 1 June 2011.
  7. Qureshi, Bilal. "Breaking The Mold: Artist's Modern Miniatures Remix Islamic Art.", NPR, Retrieved 27 December 2018.
  8. Kunitz. Daniel. Exhibition note: Daniel Kunitz on "Inheriting Cubism: The Impact of Cubism on American Art," at Hollis Taggert Galleries & Shahzia Sikander in "Conversations with Traditions" at Asia Society. New Criterion. February 2002. 20. 6. 40. 23 April 2014.
  9. Book: Chadwick, Whitney. Women, Art and Society. 2007. Thames & Hudson Inc.. New York. 978-0-500-20393-4. 446.
  10. Leffingwell. Edward. Edward Leffingwell. Shahzia Sikander at Brent Sikkema. Art in America. 14 Jan 2006. 94. 1. 119–120.
  11. Book: Vartanian, Ivan. Art Work: Seeing Inside the Creative Process. 2011. Goliga Books, Inc.. 680 Second Street, San Francisco, CA, 94107. 978-0-8118-7128-0. 53. Justine Parker.
  12. Web site: Shahzia Sikander. Biography/ Press. Hostfelt Gallery. 10 June 2015.
  13. Book: Vartanian, Ivan. Art Work: Seeing Inside the Creative Process. 2011. Goliga Books, Inc.. 680 Second Street, San Francisco, CA 94107. 978-0-8118-7128-0. 59. Justine Parker.
  14. Web site: Jepsen. Cara. On Exhibit: Shahzia Sikander Makes Herself Clear. 5 March 1998 . The Chicago Reader. 10 June 2015.
  15. Web site: Opener 6: Shahzia Sikander- Nemesis . Tang Museum . 10 June 2015.
  16. Web site: New Commission by Internationally Acclaimed Artist Shahzia Sikander at Princeton University Princeton University Art Museum. 2020-11-30. artmuseum.princeton.edu.
  17. Web site: Pleasure Pillars . The Morgan Library and Museum. June 4, 2021 .
  18. Web site: Shahzia Sikander: Melting Boundaries Art21 "Extended Play" . YouTube. May 17, 2023 .
  19. News: Shahzia Sikander Sculpture Beheaded at the University of Houston. Karen K. Ho. July 9, 2024. ART News.
  20. News: Statue Honoring Women and Justice Vandalized at University of Houston. Zachary Small. July 9, 2024. New York Times.
  21. Web site: Shahzia Sikander Biography. artnet.com. 2018-12-27.
  22. Web site: Just In: A Seminal Watercolor by Shahzia Sikander. November 20, 2014. Los Angeles Modern Auctions (LAMA). 2018-12-26.
  23. Web site: Shahzia Sikander. 2018-08-06. LANDMARKS. University of Texas, College of Fine Arts. en. 2018-12-27.
  24. Book: Shahzia Sikander: Acts of Balance. 2000. Whitney Museum of American Art. Frances Mulhall Achilles Library Whitney Museum of American Art. en.
  25. News: Art in Review – Shahzia Sikander. Cotter. Holland. 2000-06-09. The New York Times. 2018-12-27. en-US. 0362-4331.
  26. Web site: Viewpoints: A Conversation with Shirin Neshat and Shahzia Sikander. Asia Society. en. 2018-12-27.
  27. Web site: Installation by Shahzia Sikander at SDMA. artdaily.com. 2018-12-27.
  28. https://tang.skidmore.edu/exhibitions/163-opener-6-br-shahzia-sikander-nemesis "Shahzia Sikander: Nemesis"
  29. Web site: New Work: Shazia Sikander - Nemesis. www.pamm.org. 2018-12-27.
  30. http://www.fabricworkshopandmuseum.org/Exhibitions/ExhibitionDetail.aspx?ExhibitionId=d5ecc407-a772-4651-a78a-3c2979a024e8 "Shahzia Sikander"
  31. Web site: Shahzia Sikander at the Irish Museum of Modern Art. 2007-03-27. artdaily.com. 2018-12-27.
  32. https://www.mca.com.au/artists-works/exhibitions/454-shahzia-sikander/ "Shahzia Sikander"
  33. https://www.si.edu/exhibitions/shahzia-sikander-selects-works-from-the-permanent-collection-2951 "Shahzia Sikander Selects: Works from the Permanent Collection"
  34. Web site: Shahzia Sikander 'I am also not my own enemy' - Exhibition at Pilar Corrias in London. ArtRabbit. en. 2018-12-27.
  35. Web site: Shahzia Sikander's The exploding company man and other abstractions - Announcements. April 22, 2011. www.e-flux.com. en. 2018-12-27.
  36. https://massart.edu/exhibitions/galleries/shahzia-sikander-exploding-company-man-and-other-abstractions "Exploding Company Man and Other Abstractions"
  37. News: Stormaktskonflikter i miniformat - Kulturnytt i P1. Sveriges Radio . 31 March 2014 . Lantto . Freja .
  38. https://www.guggenheim.org/exhibition/shahzia-sikander-parallax "Shahzia Sikander, Parallax"
  39. https://www.maxxi.art/en/events/shahzia-sikander-ecstasy-as-sublime-heart-as-vector/ "Shahzia Sikander: Ecstasy as Sublime, Heart as Vector"
  40. Web site: Angeleti . Gabriella . Shahzia Sikander, creator of feminist miniatures, will have a major show at The Morgan in New York . www.theartnewspaper.com . 18 May 2021 . en . 16 March 2021.
  41. Web site: At a Cambridge University college wrestling with its imperial past, Shahzia Sikander's show offers new ideas on restitution . www.theartnewspaper.com . 9 May 2022 . en . 15 September 2021.
  42. Web site: time/frame. Blanton Museum of Art. en-US. 2018-12-27.
  43. https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/149 "Drawing Now: Eight Propositions"
  44. https://queensmuseum.org/2015/11/fatal-love-south-asian-american-art-now "Fatal Love: South Asian American Art Now"
  45. Web site: "Dirty Yoga: The Fifth Taipei Biennial" at Taipei Fine Arts Museum. Artforum.com. 18 January 2007 . en-US. 2018-12-27.
  46. https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/global_feminisms "Global Feminisms"
  47. News: Global Feminisms - Art - Review. Smith. Roberta. 2007-03-23. The New York Times. 2018-12-27. en-US. 0362-4331.
  48. Web site: Global Feminisms. Wellesley College. en. 2018-12-27.
  49. https://momaps1.org/exhibitions/view/135 "Not for Sale"
  50. https://imma.ie/whats-on/order-desire-light-an-exhibition-of-contemporary-drawings/ "Order. Desire. Light."
  51. https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/311 "Compass in Hand: Selections from the Judith Rothschild Foundation Contemporary Drawings Foundation"
  52. https://www.si.edu/Exhibitions/Moving-Perspectives-Shahzia-SikanderXun-4589 "Moving Perspectives: Shahzia Sikander and Sun Xun"
  53. Web site: Shahzia Sikander CV from Sean Kelly Gallery Website.
  54. http://joanmitchellfoundation.org/artist-programs/artist-grants/painter-sculptors/1998 "Joan Mitchell Foundation - Painters & Sculptors Program"
  55. https://www.macfound.org/fellows/790/ "MacArthur Foundation - Shahzia Sikander"
  56. https://2009-2017.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2012/11/201172.htm "Art World To Celebrate U.S. Department of State's Art in Embassies' 50th Anniversary"
  57. Web site: Shahzia SIKANDER .