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An
intelligent interplay of geometric severity and organic pliancy,
'Dimensions of the Illimitable' by Imran Mir, shown at VM Gallery,
is a cogent argument not only for abstract painting, but also for
the continuing vitality of a late modernist aesthetic.
Organic
abstraction derives from forms found in nature, from plants and
animals in the landscape, as well as the human body. Curvilinear
form, dimension, mass, texture and colours from a muted palette
often characterise these works. Diametrically opposed to organic
abstraction, geometric abstraction comes from the analytical and
mechanistic realms. Hard lines, flat areas of space and bright and
unnatural colours typically characterise these works. A highly evolved
level of design dominates the compositions. Geometric abstraction
is often viewed as art for art's sake.
Recasting the European/American models and aims of modernist art,
Mir, assiduously searching for a new rhetoric of abstract painting,
continues to test audience perceptions with his challenging 'Papers
on Modern Art.' Exhibiting for well over three decades now, he recently
put up works from his Tenth and Eleventh Papers.
Ranging from large to extra large and outsize in scale, the works
are assertive yet impersonal. Deliberately avoiding the use or concealing
the identity of any recognisable form of reality, Mir rejects specificity
of subject, choosing to rely more on aesthetic design elements to
build content in his paintings. Investing his faith in the magic
of the line, Mir exploits its manifold technical possibilities.
Inventing a remarkably precise method of painting geometric circles,
squares and triangles in a grid format, he has perfected his hold
on frameworks and networks of lines as primary manifestations of
form in his compositions. Unlike works concentrating on emotional,
social or political issues, his paintings build substance by integrating
geometric and organic shapes. The organic lines give movement and
flow to the art, while the geometric lines give structure and stability.
Together, they create energy and excitement on the canvas as the
eye comprehends first one and then the other. A deeper and closer
interaction with the spherical grid paintings reveals a statistical
network of lines that crisscross each other in a truly entrancing
mathematical sense of motion. Mir's ability to endow rigid stolid
configurations with poise and grace could well be the challenge
he grapples with in his art. The artist in him emerges as a designer
trying to humanise the abstract forces of technology.
Chromatic choices are also deliberate in Mir's compositions. The
intensity and spread of his primaries like blue, red and yellow
are as calculated as the precision of his geometric renderings.
He revels in flat hard-edged applications of paint over large areas
but, at times, the softest of strokes casually brushed along is
all that is needed to animate the huge dead expanse of a single
harsh tone.
Referencing imagery related to industrial design, Mir's repertoire
concentrates mainly on emphatic graphics to define his thrust. Rooted
in the reductive aspect of modernism, his minimal, concrete and
mechanical forms recede and advance, balance and float, disintegrate
and reform to create engaging optical variations in vast fields
of spatial ambiguity. Uncanny and mysterious, it is the very simplicity
in his art that evokes complex responses. The strength of the show
is grounded in the beauty and whimsy of the pieces.
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