Sculpture No. 2, 1965

Rasheed Araeen
Sculpture No. 2, 1965
Steel and paint
122 x 122 x 122 cm
Installation view
Reproduced by Sharjah Art Foundation, 2014

Overview

Rasheed Araeen: Before and After Minimalism presents sculptures, paintings, and drawings created during the more-than 50-year career of this influential Pakistani-born British artist.

The exhibition traces his evolution as a painter in Karachi to his shift towards Minimalism in London and ultimately to his international recognition and achievements as a post-Minimalist sculptor.

Trained as a civil engineer, Rasheed Araeen is best known for his formal, geometric sculptures often created from simple, sometimes industrial materials. Eschewing traditional sculptural hierarchies and compositional concerns, Araeen’s works are informed by his social and political convictions.

Founding editor of important critical journals including The Third Text, Rasheed Araeen has been at the forefront of the politically charged discourse between artists, institutions and audiences. This first major exhibition of the artist’s work in the MENASA includes early paintings and drawing, documentation of participatory and performance works, seminal sculptures from the 1960’s and a new sculpture specially commissioned for Sharjah.

Curated by Hoor Al-Qasimi.

Artwork Images

Before the Departure (black paintings)

Rasheed Araeen
1963―1964

Oil on canvas
Dimensions variable
Collection of Majeed Araeen, Karachi

View all images
Before the Departure (black paintings) Image

Before the Departure (black paintings)

Rasheed Araeen
1963―1964

Oil on canvas
Dimensions variable
Collection of Majeed Araeen, Karachi

Before the Departure (black paintings) Image

Views of Karachi

Rasheed Araeen
1953―1958

Watercolour on paper
Dimensions variable
Araeen Family Collection, Karachi

Views of Karachi Image

Boats: Towards Abstraction

Rasheed Araeen
1958―1962

Watercolour, pastel and black ink on paper
Dimensions variable
Collection of Majeed Araeen, Karachi

Boats: Towards Abstraction Image

Rasheed Araeen:Before and After Minimalism

Mixed media
Dimensions variable
Installation view

Rasheed Araeen:Before and After Minimalism Image

Rasheed Araeen:Before and After Minimalism

Rasheed Araeen
1955―1958

Watercolour, charcoal, pencil, crayon and biro on paper
24 paintings, 57 x 43 cm each
Installation view
Collection of Majeed Araeen, Karachi

Rasheed Araeen:Before and After Minimalism Image

People of Karachi

Rasheed Araeen
1955―1958

Watercolour, charcoal, pencil, crayon and biro on paper
24 paintings, 57 x 43 cm each
Installation view
Collection of Majeed Araeen, Karachi

Close images
People of Karachi Image
  • Upcoming publication

    An upcoming publication will provide a comprehensive overview of the artist work from his early years to the present.

  • On view in this exhibition

    Views of Karachi, 1953―1958
    Watercolour on paper
    Dimensions variable
    Araeen Family Collection, Karachi


    People of Karachi, 1955―1958
    Watercolour, charcoal, pencil, crayon and biro on paper
    24 paintings
    57 x 43 cm each
    Araeen Family Collection, Karachi


    Boats at Keamari, 1958―1959
    6 paintings
    Watercolour on paper
    Dimensions variable
    Araeen Family Collection, Karachi


    Boats: Towards Abstraction, 1958―1962
    Watercolour, pastel and black ink on paper
    Dimensions variable
    Collection of Majeed Araeen, Karachi


    Dancing bodies (Hula Hoop Series), 1959―1961
    Crayon, black and coloured ink on paper
    Dimensions variable
    Sharjah Art Foundation Collection


    Hyderabad, 1962―1963
    Watercolour, pastel and black ink on paper
    Dimensions variable
    Collection of the Artist’s family, Karachi


    Before the Departure(black paintings), 1963―1964
    Oil on canvas
    Dimensions variable
    Collection of Majeed Araeen, Karachi


    Untitled (Series A), 1961
    6 paintings
    Black ink on paper
    53 x 43 cm each
    Collection of Najma Sultana, Karachi


    Untitled (Series B), 1962
    Felt pen on paper
    6 paintings
    each 43 x 53 cm
    Collection of Najma Sultana, Karachi


    Sculpture No.1(version II), 1965
    4 pieces
    Steel and metallic paint
    30.5 x 30.5 x 183 cm each
    Reproduced by Sharjah Art Foundation, 2014
    Sharjah Art Foundation Collection


    Sculpture No.2, 1965
    16 pieces
    Steel
    30.5 x 30.5 x 122 cm each
    Reproduced by Sharjah Art Foundation, 2014
    Sharjah Art Foundation Collection


    First Structure (version II), 1966―1967
    16 pieces
    Steel and metallic paint
    30.5 x 30.5 x 122 cm each
    Reproduced by Sharjah Art Foundation, 2014


    Second Structure, 1966―1967
    Steel and metallic paint
    183 x 80.8 x 80.8 cm
    Courtesy the Artist


    Chaar Yaar, 1968
    4 pieces
    Wood and paint
    61 x 61 x 61 cm each
    Courtesy the Artist


    Lal Kona (Red Corner), 1969
    Wood and paint
    145 x 30.5 x 30.5 cm
    Collection of Amrita Jhaveri, London/India


    Untitled 7SR, 1969
    Wood and paint
    173 x 234 x 10 cm
    Courtesy the Artist

    Shurbati: Forty Years On, 1973―2013
    Wood and house paint
    3 pieces
    175 x 70 x 17 cm
    Courtesy the Artist


    Chakras, 1969―1970
    24 circular discs
    61 cm diameter each
    24 coloured photographs
    Dimensions variable
    Courtesy the Artist


    Triangles, 1970
    Wood triangles and black and white photographs
    244 x 244 x 25 cm
    Courtesy the Artist


    Discosailing, 1970―1973/2001
    (A work with an international patent)
    6 photographs, drawings and fibre glass disc
    Dimensions variable
    Sharjah Art Foundation Collection


    Conversation with Rasheed Araeen, 1987
    Video
    45 minutes by Anadi Ramamurthy
    Retake Film and Video Collective, London
    Courtesy the Artist


    Sharjah Blues, 2014
    Steel and metallic paint
    313 x 45 x 45 cm
    Commissioned by Sharjah Art Foundation
    Sharjah Art Foundation Collection


    Blue 5SR, 1970
    Wood and paint
    173 x 165 x 10 cm
    Courtesy the Artist


    Drawing for sculptures, 1966―1968
    Pencil and ink on paper
    8 drawings
    50 x 40 cm each
    Courtesy the Artist

  • Hoor Al Qasimi and Rasheed Araeen

    Following is an interview between Rasheed Araeen and SAF Director and exhibition curator Hoor Al Qasimi that took place in London, 2014.

    HOOR AL QASIMI: I want to ask first about your joining the Black Panther Party. Can you tell me about that?

    RASHEED ARAEEN: In the early 1970’s I went through a bad period despite the fact that I had been living and working in London since the mid-1960s. I was not getting any help from the institutions; private galleries didn’t want to know me, so I was in a dilemma if not disenchanted. I had some friends who talked with me about the Black Panthers. Then I read a book that made me realise that I was caught in a new colonial situation. So I had a solution to this new situation that would be political: I would give up my work to join the Black Panthers and work in the streets in Brixton, and in the North.

    HQ : What happened? What made you come back?

    RA: The internal contradictions within the group. Some people were fighting with each other and by the end of the 1970s the whole thing collapsed and the Black Panthers were dismantled.

    HQ: And then you started the journal The Third Text?

    RA: By then I began thinking about how I could continue to make works of art. I had a close friend who was very well known named David Medalla and we talked a lot about art and politics. We joined together in opening Artists for Democracy. That was during my extreme political phase.

    HQ: How did that influence your artwork?

    RA: It did a lot particularly in the 1970s. In 1975 I wrote a Black manifesto called The Black Phoenix in which I outlined what could be the future of art in the Third World.

    HQ: What do you think about the situation now in comparison to what you were thinking then?

    RA: It has changed tremendously. In the 1970s art establishments, whether they were public institutions like Tate or other influential organisations and galleries, they did not want to know about these political things.

    HQ: When did this change?

    RA: Things began to change in the 1980s because of two developments, the first being the beginning of multiculturalism in Britain as well as in America. Institutions began to implement affirmative action policies and they began to promote non-white artists and academics on this basis. Many people were admitted to universities in America and Britain even though some of these institutions were simply ticking the boxes on admissions applications to meet a quota. The second thing that happened during this period was the globalisation of capital and correspondingly the globalisaton of the art market. The art market wanted more than they could get from Europe and America. Because of this expansion, institutions looked beyond Europe towards Africa and Asia.

    HQ: Can you tell me how your exhibition The Other Story at the Hayward in 1989 came about?

    RA: I had been struggling with the Establishment not only for myself but for all the non-white artists living here in Britain. Wherever I went a got a cold shoulder; these institutions were not interested our work. Then, by the end of the 1980s the changes I mentioned earlier were well underway. The Arts Council had instructions from the Department of Culture that it should spend a measurable portion of its budget on so-called ethnic artists. It was in this atmosphere in 1987 that I went back to Arts Council and received a positive response.

    HQ: The exhibition we are doing in Sharjah is titled Before and After Minimalism and we show your very early work, your minimalist work as well as new works. Can you describe how your work has shifted into minimalism and beyond that?

    RA: The way I became an artist is very strange and most unusual. I never wanted to be an artist. I became an artist because art pushed me into it. Before I came here to Britain there were two elements that had already emerged in my work. The first is the helical movement or vertical movement in my work, which is very similar to the movement of a double helix. The other element was my study of boats as abstractions and the essential shape of the triangle that emerged as a result. So there were two things present very early on in my work: triangles and vertical movement. When I came to London, I wanted to forget everything I did in Karachi because I realised after seeing all the work here and in Paris that I must start afresh; I needed to think about what I could do in the context of what I had seen and experienced. I became fascinated with structures and decided I should become a sculptor despite the fact I had no training in sculpture. I couldn’t even handle the tools. Instinctively I hit upon the idea of sculpture as a symmetrical structure.

    Several years later I developed the lattice structure. Upon examining the structure of lattice you have everything seen in my work: triangles and vertical movement. That is the connection between the work I did in Pakistan in the early years and what I have developed since then. That is why I call the exhibition Before and After Minimalism.

    HQ: What happened to your work after minimalism?

    RA: I broke the minimalist structure in a work called Zero to Infinity and from that I made two other works after minimalism.

    HQ: How do you think the works relate to each other?

    RA: They relate to each other through the development of the idea, not through form. Form keeps changing but the idea is the same and is always there.

    HQ: There is also an interactive element in your work with these new structures. What was the idea behind these pieces like?

    RA: The idea was the breaking off of the rigid symmetrical structure of minimalism. The result became a process that could be carried out by people viewing and engaging with the structures.

    HQ: The exhibition at the Tate was interactive.

    RA: Yes, that was recent, in 2011. The piece was actually done in 2007. The work is meant to be handled and it should be handled.

    HQ: Is this the first time you have exhibited your Karachi works together your minimalist structures?

    RA: Yes it is the first time. It is also the first time that the Karachi works have been exhibited outside of Karachi.

    HQ: How did you choose these colours for the structures in Sharjah?

    RA: The title of one of the pieces is called Shurbati and it is inspired by the colours of sherbet, a sweet and cold refreshment that we drank during childhood in the Middle East. I created the orange colour in 1973 and then I abandoned it. I came back to it in 2013.

    This text is excerpted from the catalogue for the exhibition.

Related

Rasheed Araeen: Before and After Minimalism

Araeen, Rasheed

Known for his formal geometric sculptures made from simple materials, Rasheed Araeen is widely considered to be an early pioneer of minimalism.