Home Culture Qureshi Brings Blood-Themed Art to Rome

Qureshi Brings Blood-Themed Art to Rome

by AFP
Tiziana Fabi—AFP

Tiziana Fabi—AFP

Pakistani artist says his work continues to be inspired by brutal bombings in homeland.

Pakistani artist Imran Qureshi brought his award-winning exhibition on beauty and violence to Rome on Monday, unveiling the blood-themed creations which saw him appointed Deutsche Bank’s 2013 “Artist of the Year.”

The 41-year-old, who was given the honor of creating an installation on the rooftop of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art this year, has brought 35 works to Rome’s Macro museum for an exhibition that runs until Nov. 17.

A rising star of South Asia’s “neo-miniaturist” group of artists, Qureshi pays homage to the ancient Islamic art form of miniatures in the collection while simultaneously exploring elements of contemporary abstract painting.

Many of the works contrast life and brutal death, with a splattering of red acrylic paint to suggest blood and intricate foliage designs representing life.

In one, what appears to be the blood splatter from a gunshot wound drips down a white background to pool on the floor, while in another two giant, sun-like yellow spheres are tinged with a violent red. Another sphere reminiscent of a fruit sports flowers of blood.

The artist, who teaches miniatures at Lahore’s National College of Arts (NCA), has said the color tone in his work is inspired by brutal bombings in Pakistan—in particular, one strike close to his family home which destroyed a market three years ago.

The instant transformation of place full of life to bloody landscape had a deep effect on his work, he said.

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