The Murree Residency concluding today conveys once again that art is more of an experience than an object
In a building just a few furlongs away from the Government House Murree, where negotiations between the Taliban and Afghan government were said to have been held recently, negotiations of another kind are taking place. Not much hyped or reported, the other exchange is as exclusive and anticipated as the secret dialogue between the two groups from the war-torn country. This meeting is the Murree Museum Artist Residency held from July 26 July-August 16, 2015. Organised by Saba Khan at a private house, six artists are participating including Madyha Jan Leghari who is the coordinator of the Residency. In its second year, the Residency runs smoothly at a venue that has sufficient studio space and living facilities. Like everywhere else, the artists coming from various backgrounds (Pakistan, Japan and South Korea/Australia) communicate with each other as they are exposed to a different environment away from their usual workplace. Everyone knows that a diplomatic discourse does not produce immediate results; it contributes towards building an atmosphere of trust, reconciliation and future contacts. Likewise, artists who come for a residency talk, spend time at a new surrounding (they may not make a sufficient body of quality work) but the experience eventually helps them in creating works that are different from their usual practice, and which certainly have a mark of the time spent at a faraway site. That faraway place is Murree. So when you leave your home in Karachi or Lahore in the heat of July, you are conscious of moving to a new place. But on top of the hills, you’re pulled away from the normal calendar of summer months, and transported to a cooler zone where you’re expected to wear warm clothes. All participants know that soon they would have to go back to reality -- of hot and humid days. The residency at Murree is therefore almost like a dream -- a collective dream in which the organiser, coordinator, artists and occasional guest critics participate; and this parallel reality offers something drastically different from one’s normal circumstances. It provides a mental space to move beyond, away from and above one’s usual setting, and experience another dimension of the labyrinthine of creativity. At the Murree Residency, artists Seher Naveed, Seema Nusrat, Shakila Haider, Hyun Ju Kim and Hiroshi Tachibana are living far from their homes, studios and expected art practices. They are in constant contact with Madyha Jan Leghari, the coordinator and Saba Khan, the organiser of the Residency along with residents of Murree, but no one knows what would come out of their sojourn of so many days in that hill-top.