Zarina Hashmi
(1937 - 2020)
Road Lines
“My work is not about the medium—it is about a concept. I begin with the word, not the image.” - ZARINA HASHMI Zarina Hashmi, who preferred to be known as simply ‘Zarina’, bore witness to the harrowing events of the Partition of India at a tender age of 10. This deeply impactful experience kindled within her a profound fascination with the intricate politics of home, space, and migration-themes that would come to define her...
“My work is not about the medium—it is about a concept. I begin with the word, not the image.” - ZARINA HASHMI Zarina Hashmi, who preferred to be known as simply ‘Zarina’, bore witness to the harrowing events of the Partition of India at a tender age of 10. This deeply impactful experience kindled within her a profound fascination with the intricate politics of home, space, and migration-themes that would come to define her illustrious artistic journey that spanned several decades. Zarina began working with printmaking in the 1960s, experimenting and exploring different materials during her travels to Bangkok, India, Paris, Japan, and New York. In New York, she was part of and engaged deeply with a community of women artists. She greatly appreciated the works of Eva Hesse, Louise Bourgeois, and Nancy Graves. It was especially Agnes Martin’s works that left an indelible mark on the artist’s own works. “Zarina describes a world in her prints that is unpeopled yet it is a world that resonates with the most basic of human emotions of needing to know where one belongs.” (Mary-Ann Lutzer-Milford, Cities, Countries and Borders: Prints by Zarina, Bombay and New Delhi: Gallery Chemould and Gallery Espace, 2004) Her abstracted aesthetic, dense with meaning, weaves a poetics of space and reflects on the politics of cultural migration, making her works both personal and political. Her portfolios of prints are intended to come together to narrate her autobiography. Road Lines, 1996, are prints about Zarina’s annual journeys, shuttling between her New York studio, her faculty residence in Santa Cruz, and her visits to her elderly parents in Karachi. The “portfolio of four etchings is marked by two prints with staccato lines that construct the mile after mile journey across this vast country ending in two prints, the first with only two vertical parallel lines that bifurcate the white field, and the last a series of short black lines in a row perhaps signifying the all too frequent trips back and forth. Road Lines ends with a couplet from an Urdu poem by [Allama Muhammad] lqbal. “One who broke away from the caravan and got disillusioned by the faith.” These portfolios reflect the aesthetics of prudence that characterizes all of her work no matter what the mediums she chooses.” (Joyce Brodsky, “The Imprint of a Transnational Life”, Zarina: Weaving Memory, Mumbai: Bodhi Art, 2007)River of Tears, 2007, is an important work where Zarina recasts the vestiges of her memory of the Partition. Employing a distinct execution for her otherwise geometric vocabulary, she strings together a lustre of pearls allowed to flow, as she expresses, “It was like a river of tears for millions of people who had to leave their homes and settle in a new place.” (Katherine Muhlenkamp, “Artistic Tapestry,” The University of Chicago Magazine, 2013, online)
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Lot
77
of
78
EVENING SALE: MODERN ART
16 SEPTEMBER 2023
Estimate
Rs 25,00,000 - 35,00,000
$30,125 - 42,170
Winning Bid
Rs 55,20,000
$66,506
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
ARTWORK DETAILS
Zarina Hashmi
Road Lines
Signed and dated 'Zarina 96' (lower right); inscribed 'Road Lines I-IV' (lower centre) and '32/35' (lower left)
1996
Portfolio of 4 etchings and an Urdu couplet by Allama Muhammad Iqbal; Etchings printed in black on Arches Cover buff paper and chine collé on Nepalese handmade paper; text printed on buff paper
Print size: 6 x 4 in (15 x 10.5 cm) (each) Sheet size: 10 x 8.7 in (25.5 x 20.5 cm) (each)
Thirty-second from a limited edition of thirty-five, plus two artist's proof
PROVENANCE Private Collection, New Delhi
EXHIBITEDMapping a Life: 1991 – 2001 , Oakland: Mills College Art Museum, 4 November - 21 December 2001 (another from the edition)Weaving Memory: 1990 – 2006 , Mumbai: Bodhi Art, 2007 (another from the edition)Zarina: Paper Like Skin , Los Angeles: Hammer Museum, 30 September - 30 December 2012; New York: Solomon R Guggenheim Museum, 25 January - 21 April 2013; Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, 26 June - 22 September 2013 (another from the edition)The Location of Lines , Chicago: Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, 29 August 2020 – 21 February 2021 (another from the edition) PUBLISHED Roobina Karode, “Mapping a Life: Veiled in Poetry and Geometry”, Zarina-Mapping a Life: 1991 – 2001 , Oakland: Mills College Art Museum, 2001, p. 37 (Road Lines IV ; illustrated, another from the edition) Sharmistha Ray, Zarina-Weaving Memory: 1990 – 2006 , Mumbai: Bodhi Art, 2007 (illustrated, another from the edition) Allegra Pesenti, Zarina: Paper Like Skin , California: Hammer Museum and DelMonico Books, 2012, p. 28 (Road Lines I ; illustrated, detail), p. 95 (Road Lines I ; illustrated); and pp. 96 – 97 (Road Lines II , Road Lines III , Road Lines IV ; illustrated, another from the edition)
Category: Print Making
Style: Abstract