Tuesday, September 7, 2010

MASOOD HUSSAIN: THE ENCHANTING PAINTER FROM KASHMIR.

( Masood Hussain's Installation Work in Badamvari Garden, Srinagar ) 

                                                                                  

WASHES OF SILENCE: MASOOD HUSSAIN AND THE ART OF REMEMBERING KASHMIR 


In an art exhibition  of Masood Hussain,  noted artist Manjeet Bawa said this:-


"In his work, there are no flowers, rivers or colours, yet he portrays the true culture of Kashmir " 

 Masood Hussain occupies a singular position in contemporary art. At a time when global art markets often reward spectacle, provocation, and monumental scale, Masood Hussain has remained steadfastly committed to watercolour, a medium frequently dismissed in dominant Western hierarchies as minor, intimate, or preparatory. Yet in his hands, watercolour becomes neither decorative nor nostalgic. It becomes epistemological. It becomes a method of thinkingabout  Kashmir.

 For European audiences accustomed to the historic tropes of “the Orient” or the romantic sublime, Hussain’s practice offers a counter-image. Kashmir, long aestheticised in travel writing and colonial photography as “paradise on earth,” appears in his paintings neither as a touristic fantasy nor as a stage set for conflict. Instead, it emerges as lived habitat: bazaars at mid-morning, the angled geometry of shrines, the slow choreography of boatmen in pherans, and the skeletal dignity of winter chinars. His is not the Kashmir of spectacle, but of duration.

 Biography and Formation: Discipline and Draftsmanship

 Born and based in Srinagar, Hussain was trained formally in applied arts and design. He completed a Graduate Diploma in Art Commercials from the Sir J.J. Institute of Applied Arts in Mumbai and later served as Head of the Department of Applied Arts at the Institute of Music & Fine Arts, Srinagar. This trajectory is important. His grounding in commercial art endowed him with a structural rigour: clarity of line, compositional discipline, and respect for negative space. Yet his mature work marks a decisive departure from applied aesthetics toward contemplative painting.

 Unlike many contemporaries who migrated totally into installation, digital media, or conceptual assemblage, Hussain remained committed to drawing and watercolour. This decision reads not as conservatism but as resistance: a refusal to abandon the tactile intimacy of paper, brush, and wash in favour of scale or technological spectacle. His surfaces are almost always modest in dimension; their power lies in what they withhold.

 Watercolour as Philosophy

 Watercolour is unforgiving. It resists correction. It requires foresight without rigidity. Hussain exploits this tension. His washes are translucent but never loose; colour settles into architectural frameworks with precision. Atmospheric perspective, mist dissolving into the horizon, snow muting chromatic intensity, coexist with meticulous draftsmanship in doorways, lattice windows, and prayer halls.

 In many European traditions, watercolour became associated with the picturesque: portable, spontaneous, ideal for landscape tourism. Hussain reverses that association. His work is not picturesque but phenomenological. He does not paint Kashmir to seduce the eye; he paints it to recalibrate perception. Light does not dramatise; it equalises. Texture does not overwhelm; it breathes.

 Through tonal restraint, earthen ochres, tempered blues, and winter greys, he constructs a language of quiet endurance. The viewer is asked to look slowly, to linger in the interstices of detail: a row of market stalls, the stillness before prayer, the faint reflection of a wooden eave in water.

 The Everyday as Archive

 A recurring subject in Hussain’s oeuvre is the ordinary urban and semi-urban landscape of Srinagar and its environs. Works such as depictions of Hazratbal Bazaar or congregational mosque precincts shift attention away from postcard vistas toward civic spaces of gathering. These paintings function as visual ethnographies.

In societies marked by prolonged political tension, everyday life becomes both fragile and resistant. Hussain does not illustrate conflict; he registers continuity. A market operating under uncertain skies, a shrine courtyard half-shadowed by winter light, these scenes assert the dignity of survival without rhetoric.

 His long-running series ‘Transparent Strokes’, shared digitally for over fifteen years, reveals another dimension of this archival impulse. By posting watercolours online, Hussain inadvertently created a dispersed visual commons for the Kashmiri diaspora. Displaced communities responded with memory fragments: a grandfather’s shop, a childhood alleyway, the scent of autumn chinar leaves. The paintings became mnemonic triggers, allowing exile to converse with the image. In this sense, Hussain’s work exceeds aesthetic production; it becomes social memory work.

 Collaboration and Transnational Aesthetics: Dialogue with Gabriel Rosenstock

 Hussain’s partnership with Irish poet Gabriel Rosenstock marks a fascinating transnational axis. Beginning with Walk with Gandhi: Bóthar na Saoirse (2019), commemorating the 150th anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, and continuing with’ Boatman! Take These Songs from Me (2023)’ and ‘Love Letter to Kashmir (2024)’, the collaboration pairs watercolour with haiku and tanka forms. The dialogue is formally significant. Haiku and Tanka, compressed, image-driven, reliant on seasonal nuance, mirror Hussain’s visual economy. Where Rosenstock condenses emotion into three or five lines, Hussain distils atmosphere into controlled washes. Poetry and painting meet in restraint.

 In Boatman! Take These Songs from Me, grief becomes shared territory. Hussain’s relief-like compositions evoke human vulnerability; Rosenstock answers with verse that meditates on longing and liberty. By the time of ‘Love Letter to Kashmir’, the tone has shifted toward balm and reparation. The book envisions light that falls “on tyrant and toddler alike”: a universal illumination echoing mystical traditions found across Sufi and Bhakti lineages. The beloved becomes multivalent: lover, homeland, divine presence, collective memory.

For a European readership, this collaboration underscores an essential point: Hussain’s work does not inhabit isolation. It converses across languages and continents without surrendering regional specificity.

  Winter in Kashmir: Ephemeral Strokes of Snow

 To understand the seasonal atmosphere in which Hussain paints, it is instructive to turn to reflections on Kashmir’s winters. In the ‘Snow Painting’ of Hussain, winter is described not merely as a climatic event but as an existential transformation. When autumn’s flaming chinars shed their crimson leaves, skeletal branches articulate the sky like inked calligraphy. Snow does not obliterate landscape; it simplifies it, reducing colour to whispers, ochre grass, pale blue ice, and the diffused silver of low sunlight.

 Silence becomes a palpable substance. Frozen lakes and hushed streets create a temporal suspension in which memory seems louder than sound. Rooftops bow under white weight; distant mountains recede into vapour. In this stripped chromatic field, nuance intensifies. The eye begins to notice subtle tonal gradations previously obscured by autumnal blaze. This description resonates strongly with Hussain’s winter paintings. His snow scenes avoid sentimental whiteness. Instead, they explore the ethics of reduction, what remains when colour retreats. In winter, Kashmir is neither paradise nor battlefield; it is contour and breath.

 Landscape Beyond Romanticism

 European landscape traditions: from Turner’s sublime storms to Constable’s pastoral expanses, often pivot on drama or nostalgia. Hussain’s landscapes resist both. Even when snow-capped peaks appear, they do so relationally, framing human habitation rather than dominating it.

The chinar tree, recurrent in his work, is emblematic. Rather than monumentalising it, he situates it within gardens carpeted by fallen leaves or against quiet shrines. The tree becomes a witness rather than an icon. Similarly, Dal Lake appears not as a glittering spectacle but as working water, oars cutting gently through surface reflection.

This ethical scale is central. Hussain’s Kashmir is intimate. Mountains loom, yet human scale persists. Such a balance complicates exoticising gazes and reclaims the landscape as lived ground.

 Religion and Plurality

 Shrines, mosques, and temple precincts inhabit his compositions without hierarchy. Architectural forms are rendered with respect but without theatrical grandeur. This quiet pluralism echoes Kashmir’s syncretic past, where Sufi and Hindu histories overlap spatially and spiritually.

 In European art discourse, representations of religious space often slide into identity politics or iconographic analysis. Hussain’s treatment is simpler and more radical: these spaces are painted as part of ordinary civic life. A courtyard at dusk; a row of sandals before prayer; a shaded verandah. Faith appears embedded, not proclaimed.

 The  Exodus of Kashmiri Pandits

 In Exodus (2004) and Lonely Sharika, Masood Hussain transforms the migration of Kashmiri Pandits into a metaphysical inquiry on rupture, memory, and civilisational dislocation. Rather than narrativising violence, he abstracts it into geometry, colour, and symbol, thereby elevating a historical episode into a meditation on exile itself.

 n Exodus, the Trikona, the sacred triangle, functions as a temporal aperture, its red interior suggestive of blood, fire, and wounded time. From this charged space, a bird lunges outward, embodying compelled departure rather than emancipatory flight. Yet the figure remains tethered to the Deijj-Hurra, the hexagonal ornament of Kashmiri Pandit women shaped as a Shatkona, emblematic of Shiva–Shakti unity. Suspended between interior and exterior, the ornament becomes a metaphysical counterweight: while the body traverses geography, culture resists evacuation. The relief medium intensifies this tension, granting exile tactile density and ontological weight.

 Lonely Sharika shifts the locus from migration to aftermath. Set at the Sri Chakreshwari Temple on Hari Parbat, the painting presents the Sharika Shila glowing in incandescent orange against an engulfing blue expanse. The chromatic dissonance evokes both divine persistence and existential solitude. The sacred Shat-kona frames the deity, while the intrusion of a soldier’s helmet fractures spiritual geometry with contemporary violence. Incense smoke ascends faintly, a vestige of interrupted ritual.

 Together, these works articulate displacement as a divided ontology: a condition in which departure does not annul belonging. Hussain thus reframes the migration not merely as a demographic fact but as a crisis of cultural continuity, where memory acquires gravitational force, and homeland persists as an unresolved interior presence.

 Samanbal: Architecture as Artistic Praxis

 Beyond painting, Hussain is engaged in building Samanbal, an artists’ residency overlooking Srinagar. The term denotes “meeting place.” Its conception extends his aesthetic philosophy into architecture. Constructed from reclaimed materials, windows salvaged from old houses, archaic bricks, broken tiles transformed into chandeliers, the residency embodies continuity through reuse.

 Hussain has reportedly overseen its construction personally, assuming roles from mason to carpenter. This is not a mere romantic anecdote. It reveals a belief that art is infrastructural. Representation is insufficient; spaces for dialogue must be built. In European contexts, where institutional support systems for artists are long established, Samanbal reads as both necessity and aspiration: a grassroots cultural commons. Its location, along routes that pass Dal Lake, Mughal gardens, and Dachigam’s wooded expanses, situates it within Kashmir’s layered geographies. The residency promises retreat and conversation, extending Hussain’s commitment to slow practice into communal form.

  Beyond the Image: Ethics of Restraint

Hussain’s refusal of overt polemic may perplex some contemporary critics. In a region globally associated with contestation, why avoid explicit representation of violence? The answer may lie in his method. By painting markets, shrines, and winter streets, he asserts continuity without denial. Trauma is present as atmosphere, not spectacle. This restraint recalls certain European post-war aesthetic positions, where indirectness signalled depth rather than evasion. Silence can speak; absence can accuse. In Hussain’s case, the ethics of seeing insists that dignity precedes dramatisation.


                                                                                 

                                                   ( Masood Hussain with the blogger year  2011  )
                                                               ( Photograph by the blogger 2011  )
                                                                              
                                         
                                                                                                                        
                                         
                                                           
                                        

                                                                      
                                                                        


                                                              
    
                                                                                         
                                                               
                                       
                                                                 ( Photograph by the blogger year 2010  )

Position in Contemporary Discourse

 Within South Asian art, trends oscillate between globalised conceptualism and vernacular revival. Hussain resists easy categorisation. His work is locally grounded yet internationally conversant. It is technically traditional yet conceptually contemporary. For European journals concerned with postcolonial aesthetics, ecology, and memory studies, his practice intersects multiple debates: How can landscape function as an archive? What is the role of craft in an era of digital acceleration? Hussain offers no manifesto. Instead, he offers persistent attentiveness.

 Conclusion: Safeguarding Texture

 To speak of Masood Hussain is to speak of texture, paper grain absorbing wash, brick surfaces catching winter light, fallen chinar leaves layering garden paths. His art safeguards textures threatened by erasure: architectural memory, civic rhythm, seasonal nuance. In an age of polarised representation, paradise or conflict, idyll or crisis, Hussain sustains a third space. Kashmir becomes neither propaganda nor a postcard but a habitation. Through watercolour’s disciplined humility, he constructs a visual philosophy grounded in slowness.

 For a European readership, the significance lies not merely in geographic otherness but in methodological example. Hussain demonstrates that scale need not equal importance, that intimacy can rival monumentality, and that memory work may be conducted through the gentlest of means. His paintings do not shout. They endure. And in endurance, they illuminate.


(Avtar Mota)
            
( My sincere thanks to the artist for allowing me to use some paintings from  his collection 'Transparent Strokes  ... )  

                                                                                           
Creative Commons License 

CHINAR SHADE by Autarmota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.,

10 comments:

  1. Truly a great treasure of natural art.

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  2. you are creating a consolidated treasure for the HUMAN beings. skpandita

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  3. Amazing art, Autar-ji. Thank you so much for pointing to this wonderful artiste.

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  4. thanx Geetali ji.You can see more on FB. just find Masood sahib in my friends list .

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  5. Well such amazing collection. My heart swelled with emotion on seeing such art work.It feels great to be a part of this culture

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  6. Dear sachin
    thanks for the comments.

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  7. Brings back the good old memories of childhood. We really have gems in Kashmir, thanks Masood Sahab for depicting our culture and nature in colors. . .

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  8. Greetings!

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    Chief Coordinator
    08285143551

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