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Today's Paper | April 30, 2024

Published 10 Jan, 2013 12:16am

Blood Money opens at IVS

KARACHI: Blood and money are two nouns that are often treated as adjectives, both favourably and in a negative light. Together they form a formidable phrase, blood money. It, among other meanings, implies a particular amount of money given in compensation for a killing to the family of the person killed.

In Pakistan, over the years it has assumed horrendous proportions. Bloodbath (in the name of religion especially) and megalomania have had their devastating effect on society. This is the backdrop against which a group show titled ‘Blood Money’ opened at the Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture on Wednesday.

The first work of art placed right in the middle of the gallery is Anam Shakil Khan’s ‘Lavishly Bandaged’ (acrylic on canvas). It grabs the viewer’s attention because of the posture of the protagonist applying a plaster on a torn pair of jeans. The redness of the blood contrasting with the colour of the trousers is noticeable. But it is the posture of the character hiding his facial expression that does the trick for the artist.

Zain Ashir impresses both with craft and content. His ‘Diabolus Obscurari’ (ink, watercolour, graphite, pencil on paper) hints at the inherent darkness in the lust for power by showing the feral side of human existence.

The artwork has a lot going on in one frame and yet the lines do not go haywire. The artist has good control over his medium. There is likelihood that he is inspired by heavy metal stuff.

Zabad Anwar opts for the tried and tested playing cards theme but infuses new life into it by imparting a fiendish look to it – ‘The Red Game 1 & 2’ (mixed media on paper).