Aiza Ahmed's Art is a Radical Reversal of the Male Gaze.
The Pakistani artist's work challenges societal norms, particularly those related to masculinity and identity. In a year marked by market calibration, few artists have emerged as Ahmed has, rapidly gaining recognition across New York and the Gulf. Her solo show at Sargentβs Daughters was met with enthusiasm, and she is now preparing for Art Basel's Qatar in February, where her work will be featured in a curated exhibition.
Ahmed's artistic journey is defined by her experiences of constant geographical movement, having been born in Lahore and spent time in Karachi, London, Dubai, and the US. Her grandparents were originally from Calcutta but left India after the 1947 Partition, beginning a migratory trajectory that has shaped her life and art.
Her style is not straightforwardly figurative; figures are suspended between dimensions, exploring emotional and psychological space rather than synthesized volume of their bodies. The line work grounds compositions in tradition evoking comics, political satire, and caricature. Ahmed's fascination with the face and her keen observation skills have been influenced by her experiences living between cultures.
Drawing gives Ahmed a space for unfiltered expression, allowing her to see that precedes societal expectations. Her process is intuitive and stream-of-consciousness, with quick marks that don't erase. Her work often takes on a theatrical presence, staging human drama within spatially shifting narratives suspended in dreamlike atmospheres.
Portraying men becomes a role reversal for Ahmed, who observes the male gaze as a young woman. She imagines a music room authored by women, turning their gaze back onto patriarchal and colonial power. Her presentation at Art Basel Qatar continues this narrative, with new paintings, suspended muslin works, and wooden cut-out soldiers.
Ahmed's visual approach is similar to the narrative strategies used in commedia dell'arte and pantomime, using playful role-playing and seemingly naive humor to generate empathy while revealing the fragile, absurd theater of human existence. Her work acknowledges that societal rituals exist in a liminal space between public and private, where she has been both observer and participant.
For Ahmed, her work is political, as every action can be a statement. Being a brown woman is already a political act, with endless layers to add.
The Pakistani artist's work challenges societal norms, particularly those related to masculinity and identity. In a year marked by market calibration, few artists have emerged as Ahmed has, rapidly gaining recognition across New York and the Gulf. Her solo show at Sargentβs Daughters was met with enthusiasm, and she is now preparing for Art Basel's Qatar in February, where her work will be featured in a curated exhibition.
Ahmed's artistic journey is defined by her experiences of constant geographical movement, having been born in Lahore and spent time in Karachi, London, Dubai, and the US. Her grandparents were originally from Calcutta but left India after the 1947 Partition, beginning a migratory trajectory that has shaped her life and art.
Her style is not straightforwardly figurative; figures are suspended between dimensions, exploring emotional and psychological space rather than synthesized volume of their bodies. The line work grounds compositions in tradition evoking comics, political satire, and caricature. Ahmed's fascination with the face and her keen observation skills have been influenced by her experiences living between cultures.
Drawing gives Ahmed a space for unfiltered expression, allowing her to see that precedes societal expectations. Her process is intuitive and stream-of-consciousness, with quick marks that don't erase. Her work often takes on a theatrical presence, staging human drama within spatially shifting narratives suspended in dreamlike atmospheres.
Portraying men becomes a role reversal for Ahmed, who observes the male gaze as a young woman. She imagines a music room authored by women, turning their gaze back onto patriarchal and colonial power. Her presentation at Art Basel Qatar continues this narrative, with new paintings, suspended muslin works, and wooden cut-out soldiers.
Ahmed's visual approach is similar to the narrative strategies used in commedia dell'arte and pantomime, using playful role-playing and seemingly naive humor to generate empathy while revealing the fragile, absurd theater of human existence. Her work acknowledges that societal rituals exist in a liminal space between public and private, where she has been both observer and participant.
For Ahmed, her work is political, as every action can be a statement. Being a brown woman is already a political act, with endless layers to add.