Huma Mulji (born 1970 in Karachi) is a Pakistani contemporary artist.[1] Her works are in the collections of the Saatchi Gallery, London and the Asia Society Museum.[2][3][4] She received the Abraaj Capital Art Prize in 2013.[5]
Mulji's artworks were exhibited at Art Dubai in UAE,[13][14] 10th Gwangju Biennale in Gwangju, South Korea,[15][16]56th Venice Biennale in Italy,[15] Karachi Biennale 2017,[17] in Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art in Spain,[18] Asia Society Museum in New York,[19] Saatchi Gallery in UK[20] and Project 88 in Mumbai, India.[21] Her solo exhibitions include High Rise, in Elementa Gallery, Dubai, UAE in 2009,[14]Crystal Pallace and Other Follies in Rothas Gallery, Lahore, Pakistan in 2010,[22]Twilight in Project 88, Mumbai, India in 2011,[23] and A Country of Last Things in Koel Gallery, Karachi, Pakistan in 2016.[22]
Mulji's work characterizes how interpretations of culture, context, and cognition are held in creative tension. Drawing on the geography of visual culture that is part of her South Asian heritage, she opens up the politics of place,[24] engaging with the absurdities of existence and our casual acceptance of all that surrounds us.[25] The state between two things is continuously played out in Mulji's work, which places itself somewhere between sculpture and painting, photography and installation.[26] The city, the everyday and the overlooked all serve as subjects in these deliberately awkward artworks.[27]
Her sculptural installation Arabian Delight (2008) refers to the aspects of economic migration, to the anticipations of the migrants and corresponding reality.[14] The piece consists of a taxidermy camel stuffed into a suitcase and addresses also the Arabization of Pakistan.[28] It was presented at Art Dubai in 2008, but was removed after a few days to avoid a controversial topic. The removal, however, brought even more publicity to the artwork.[29] The piece was bought by Charles Saatchi[2] and became part of the collection of the Saatchi Gallery.[3]
The title of her installation Ode to a Lamppost That Got Accidentally Destroyed in the Enthusiastic Widening of Canal Bank Road (2011โ2017), exhibited at the Karachi Biennale 2017 (at Pioneer Book Store),[22] refers to a central road in Lahore where Mulji lived. Its widening caused protests. This artwork comments heavy development that becomes obsolete when the priorities shift.[30] During the Biennale, this work raised controversy.[31] Mulji placed the pole so that it was difficult to navigate in the space. Aziz Sohail noted that it was Mulji's point to make a parallel to social inequality and to how the life of people is affected during the developmental projects.[30] Hamna Zubair wrote:
In this way, the lamppost at Pioneer Book Store may just turn out to be the most authentic work at KB17, in that it organically sparked a much-need conversation about the privilege and social stratification the art world must navigate.[31]
References
^ abHashmi, Salima, ed. (2009). Hanging fire : Contemporary Art from Pakistan. New York: Asia Society Museum. p. 108. ISBN978-0-300-15418-4. OCLC317471831.
^Sullivan, Graeme, 1951- (2010). Art practice as research : inquiry in visual arts (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks [Calif.]: Sage Publications. ISBN978-1-4129-7451-6. OCLC351322811.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Schonfeld, Roger C., 1977- (2003). JSTOR : a history. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN978-1-4008-4311-4. OCLC777375664.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
Baler, Pablo (2013). The next thing : art in the twenty-first century. Madison: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN978-1-61147-451-0. OCLC828884554.