Naseem Hafiz Qazi

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Contents

Naseem Hafiz Qazi: the person

I

GENi


Birthdate: October 13, 1928

Death: January 25, 1994

Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan

Place of Burial: Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan

Daughter of Qazi Hafeezuddin and Private

Sister of Private; Private; Private; Private and Iftikhar uddin Qazi

Half sister of Iqbal Begum

Occupation: Artist & Professor

Managed by: Samir Riaz Qazi

II

Art Spak


Naseem Hafeez Qazi

(1928, Wazirabad. January 1995)


Educated at St. Christopher's School, Quetta.

She obtained her Intermediate and B.A. degree from Lahore College for women and joined the University department of the fine arts in 1945. She obtained her postgraduate diploma in fine arts in 1950. The same year she officiated as lecturerin art, Lady Maclagen Training College, Lahore and then went in 1951 to teach drawing to Matriculates at Peshawar.

Sketch Club instructress for the American Embassy Karachi, 1952; gained the University Shield for Women in the All Punjab Art Exhibition 1952; a prize-winner at the International Women's Art Exhibition Karachi 1954. Appointed lecturer in art, Government College for Women, Lyallpur (Faisalabad) 1954; lecturer in art Lahore College for Women 1955. M.A. fine arts 1956 standing first class first and receiving a gold medal.

Proceeded to study at La Escuela Royal de Bellas Arts de San Fumondo, Madrid, Spain 1957. She retired as Head of department, Lahore College of Women, 1990.

Her art

A fitting tribute

By Bibigul

Dawn

Naseem Hafiz Qazi

A much due, but fitting tribute was paid to one of the country’s most prolific female artists of yesteryear, Naseem Hafiz Qazi when an exhibition of her work titled ‘Rediscovering Naseem Hafiz Qazi’ was mounted at the Alhamra Art Galleries in Lahore by the Lahore College for Women University and the Lahore Art Council and later at the National Art Gallery, Islamabad.

Popularly known as ‘Miss Qazi’ (1928-1994), she was a colleague of Colin David, Anna Molka Ahmed and Khalid Iqbal and many art students remember her at the evening classes in the small shed on the premises of the Lahore Arts Council. In the ’50s and ’60s, female painters from the fine arts departments of the University of Punjab and Lahore College for Women were intensely inspired by the impressionists; from academic discussions, to the way they composed their figures on canvas or on board, the colour modulations in light and the shadows and the academic approach to still life or landscape. The popular medium used was either oil paints or watercolours and sculpture would be relief, or a bust in the round modelled in clay and cast in plaster of Paris. Consequently the display at the Alhamra comprised all of the above.

In Qazi’s oil paintings, there is a gentle grading of colour values, a struggle to capture the incoming light though doors and windows, showing faces that light up or darken in an attempt to look at people and their lives through a casement.

Naseem Hafiz Qazi

In her figure compositions, a broader overview of details is sought, such as the value of radiance, the continuation of the line of ‘interest’; the final objective is a search for a perfect balance of colour, line and form and skill in self expression.

Naseem Hafiz Qazi

A large number of paintings portray children occupied in various activities. In these compositions it seems as if the artist looks out the window at children longingly, as if unable to join them in their play. She also made a number of paintings of her family, friends, colleagues, domestic servants; however, amongst her earlier work there are a few exhibits of nude painting, a practice that Qazi later discontinued.

The outdoor paintings find Miss Qazi revelling in the Punjab landscape, Lawrence Gardens being very close to her heart, as it has always been to art students in Lahore. Her colours and brush strokes exude an elation of being with nature; here too, having been a student of hers, one knows she worked hard with the dilemma of space in perspective and in colour. She set her own goals and then diligently worked towards them. Her weekends were allocated for painting cityscapes of old Lahore, in which she faithfully documented the habitats in close proximity; the narrow winding streets and the pattern of shadows formed by the sunlight. Other favourites were the thatched homes of the gypsy community living by the ‘budda’ (old) Ravi River and the mud dwellings with an expanse of green fields of the rural Punjab.

Qazi’s still-life paintings depict variations of flowers, fruits, glass wares, set on and with, drapery, as an exercise that evaluates the textures and how transparent, opaque objects, absorb and reflect light.

Miss Naseem Hafeez Qazi was a very private person; she lived by rules she set for herself, she hardly ever exhibited her work and one didn’t hear of her paintings being bought or sold. She was simply attired, was punctual and walked with a straight back; she occasionally walked to the main staffroom, otherwise she was in the ‘department’ all the time, teaching or painting. This exhibition has brought a long overdue display of her work to the fore and offers some comfort to those who battle with the dilemmas of aesthetics.

Left: The fallen letter, 1978, oil on cotton canvas

Below: Boys gathering sticks in a forest, oil on hard board

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