The complexity of Karachi is its most recognisable asset, yet it is the very reason behind the city’s many splits and bifurcations. Being a major deep sea water port in South Asia, Karachi has been an entry and exit point for all types of cargo and human existence in the region; nothing is irreplaceable and no commodity is a rarity. Business comes first here, resulting in the city’s creative practitioners being inherently drawn towards uncovering ways in which the motives of commerce and profit can overlap with valuing cultural inheritance. Using mediums ranging from mechanical objects to recyclable packaging, to model-building and photography, art students have sought to depict urban landscapes amidst conversations on how artistic research can further our understanding and appreciation of the city.
For some, there seems to be a certain senselessness in trying to categorise and label Karachi. Hence, in many of the projects in ‘Intersections’, we see how young artists, mentored and guided by faculty at the university, capture these critical moments where design, movement, and public life converge creating visuals and stories which do not speak of one concept. From the towering apartment complexes across Gulshan, DHA and Clifton, to the nine-to-five rigmarole of offices, schools and daily wagers—Karachi has a way of engulfing its residents. The artworks draw inspiration from this immersion and manage to freeze time, and counteract the senseless concrete development around them during their studio investigations and site based research. Whether these methods include collaborating with technicians in the markets of Saddar or documenting historical records and maps at the Sindh Archives or refining their sense of palette and composition within the studio, the approach is multidisciplinary. Posing questions, feeling through textures, and layering stories, the students behind the work are indeed from diverse backgrounds, yet they all underline a concern for the city and its fading history.
At the Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture, founded by Karachi’s renowned artists, architects and designers, the campus building design itself echoes this philosophy through an amalgamation of the new, repurposing the old. The Nusserwanjee Building erected in Kharadar during the early twentieth century, was lifted brick by brick to its current location and re-installed at the university site in 2003. Since then, this hundred-plus year old Nusserwanjee warehouse, houses the Fine Art Department amongst other programmes. Its stone walls, exposed TATA Steel beams, and terracotta tiles serve as permanent features with which students, year after year, engage, reminding them of how the city’s heritage and colonial landmarks can be preserved for the future.