Art career
Hasnat Mehmood was trained as a traditional miniature painter at the National College of Arts, but in his enthusiastic search for a new language in this medium he transformed the traditional practice into contemporary dialogue. He is a highly progressive, radical artist. Hasnat Mehmood creates contemporary art employing a technique that is considered to be a traditional practice. The painting of miniature works of art is considered to be the cultural heritage of Pakistan; as such, it should remain recognizable as it was practiced in the past. For "purists", the experiments that Hasnat and others take in their approaches to painting minute works of art render the work to be anything but a miniature painting.Earlier work
''I Love Miniature'' explores a number of these issues related to the miniature painting movement as it has evolved in Pakistan within the past two decades. In it, Hasnat copied the works of thirteen artists who work in this medium –Recent work
Quddus Mirza wrote of his work: "Mehmood has ventured into another realm and can be labelled as a conceptual miniaturist." Of ''Holy land'' and ''I Love Miniature,'' Yeewan Koon said: "Hasnat Mehmood is perhaps the best known of the three artists and his works have been shown in galleries across the globe. The two main works in the show are formed by painstakingly painted circles that collectively read in Braille sequence, "Holy Land" and " I Love Miniature". We are reminded of the paradoxical concept that Orhan Pamuk introduced about reaching the height of aesthetic achievement through blindness. But it is the viewer who is rendered blind, at least metaphorically... " On his recent work “The Inquiry of Art” the artist stated: "The body of work produced for this show is an investigation of the very basics of Pakistani art in the present times... I think that art has never been an individual’s effort only; it has always been produced according to the times in which the artist lives." These portraits articulate this phenomenon because viewers will find a cross-listing of writers, etc. from one portrait to the next, indicating a specificity of time and place. Hasnat has been exploring conceptual art within the aesthetics of miniature painting. The subtlety in constructing portraits of personalities close to him (starting with his wife and colleagues, as well as of his friends and other fellow artists) is a sign of his conceptual twist—rather than just a transformation from being a miniature artist—and a venture into something exciting and exquisite.Solo exhibitions
* 2011: The Inquiry of Art. * 2008: Chawkandi Gallery, Karachi * 2009: Aicon Gallery, New York * 2010Selected group exhibitions
2010
*The Havelian Express, group show at CAIS gallery, Hong Kong2007
Aicon Gallery, London2006
* Between Two Worlds; Group show at Crow-eaters Gallery, Lahore * Contemporary Art from Pakistan, Group show at Asia House and Manchester Art Gallery, UK * Group show at HNTB Architecture, Washington D.C. * Lila/Play: Contemporary Miniatures & New Art from South Asia, Australia * Landscape: Places real and imagined, Group show at Alhamra Gallery, Lahore2005
* The Artist's Face, Self-Portraits of our Times, Gallery Rohtas 2, Lahore * Contemporary Miniatures, Crow-eaters Gallery, Lahore * Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, CT, USA (Exhibition would be travelling to Asian Art Museum) * Voices, World Bank Office, Islamabad2004
* Contemporary Miniatures from Pakistan, Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Japan * Playing with a Loaded Gun, Kunsthalle Fridericianum, Kasse2003
* Karkhana, Touchstones Art Gallery, Rochdale, U2002
* Paintings from Pakistan, Niavaran Gallery, TehranCollections
* British Museum, British Museum, London UK (Acquired for contemporary landscape sectioReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mehmood, Hasnat Artists from Lahore Living people National College of Arts alumni 21st-century Pakistani painters Pakistani contemporary artists Year of birth missing (living people)