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    Stories and Spaces: A Conversation with Suleman Khilji

    Written by: Khadijah Rehman
    Posted on: January 25, 2019 | | 中文

    Suleman Khilji

    The room is small, with yellow light pooling on the floor. Shelves and tables are brimming with dog eared sketchbooks and wrinkled tubes of paint, and it is here, in an old wrought iron chair that I find Suleman Khilji, whose work I have only ever seen before in the hushed fluorescence of art galleries. His name brings to mind soft, transitioning landscapes and sensitive paintings of oddball characters. A local sweeper in a jaunty green hat and ditsy sunglasses, standing tall as if he is the last king on earth, or a chaaye wala in a black leather jacket, posing like all the television stars he has ever gawked at, set against hazy backgrounds from Quetta, where the artist spent most of his childhood. The sweeper, whose name he says is Yusuf Maseeh, is slowly taking shape on a canvas, chin high and posture proud against an ethereal Titianesque sky. Khilji's quest to find and paint these strange kindred beings is a deeply intimate process. He loves to paint from life, immortalizing these shabby, magnificent men within playful renderings of his childhood city, recreated from imagination and photographs. “A painter is not just a painter,” he observes. “A painter is an investigator. All paintings are questions and hidden ideas that the artist coaxes into revelation with every mark he reverently presses onto a surface.”

    The artist's studio

    The artist's studio

    Nasir by Suleman Khilji

    Nasir by Suleman Khilji

    Above his head on a ledge, a gigantic canvas rests hidden from view. He does not want to look at this particular painting for a while, he tells me, and this vulnerability is delightfully astounding considering his oeuvre. When he graduated from the National College of Arts in 2011, Suleman Khilji's degree show left every critic, viewer and buyer enraptured. Large nightscapes in oil donned the canvases: a shrouded figure beckoned the viewer, gleaming soft yet menacing in a halo of red light. A homeless man sat by the roadside, awash in blue spilling from a street lamp, stray dogs flocking around him like disciples around a messiah. Figures of the night loomed, their faces distraught, surrounded by distorted shadows. Khilji's obsession was storytelling; folktales in Quetta he had been regaled with as a child seeped into his adulthood, and accompanied him to Lahore. His practice has evolved and deepened, but the lore remains, every face a character, every landscape blurring and morphing as if intangible - a picture of loss and transience.

    The painter's love for live drawing bloomed at a young age, and he tells me of late nights in Quetta, where he would hunker over cups of black tea in local chaaye khaanas, filling page after page with drawings of men who would frequent these tea places, an intimate documentation of real life stories that were playing out around him. At the esteemed Vasl Residency in Karachi, his search for tales and narratives remained the same, but the landscape shifted. Cinder blocks and concrete structures found their way into his poetic meanderings on paper and canvas, and teaching drawing to young pupils as part of the residency informed his work anew, which eventually crescendoed into the show See View in 2016. An image of a forlorn, floating “shopper” bag against a fading seascape formed a new kind of character, the imagery moving towards metaphors of impermanence.

    he Book that Never Existed by Suleman Khilji

    The Book that Never Existed by Suleman Khilji (Source, Suleman Khilji)

    "All you need as an artist is an origin. A singular urgency to create, a point of departure, a spark. All you know is that it is there, alive and burning. I am always looking for a tempting image to paint. That image will always be related to time, to space, to the ever morphing state of transience." He is rifling through a sketchbook as he tells me this, showing me intricately inked calligraphy, hastily scribbled phrases he might have heard in passing, and drawing upon drawing of people and places. I inquire about a painting he made of a languishing royal figure, after the miniature The Dying Inayat Khan. Khilji's appropriation of the work was painted onto his own used bedsheet, with the text "Keep Moving" printed in large block letters, among a smattering of printed toy cars and buses. We talk of Bertrand Russell’s In Praise of Idleness, and how being alive in this era is to be constantly on the move. He tells me of waking up every morning confronted by the urgent "Keep Moving" on his bed, and then travelling in buses, watching emaciated people from the lower middle class, wasting away but without the luxury of doing so in the warmth of a bed, like Inayat Khan. This regal, withering man at the brink of death has made many an appearance in Khilji's work, driving a fading taxi, lounging beneath floating shopping bags and dandelion husks, becoming a spearhead for this movement of majestic yet mortal characters that are slowly losing themselves to the inevitable act of ceasing to be.

    Keep Moving by Suleman Khilji

    Keep Moving by Suleman Khilji

    Suleman Khilji has displayed his extraordinary work both locally and internationally, and has found himself a place among the most prodigious contemporary artists from Pakistan. I am moved by the ritualistic quality of the artist's process, and his riveting pursuit of secrets and stories. In the sanctity of this space, he is concocting nothing short of magic, breathing life into unnoticed characters that might otherwise be swallowed whole by time. A verse from a Rainer Maria Rilke poem makes its way to me:

    and in the silent, sometimes hardly moving times

    when something is coming near,

    I want to be with those who know secret things

    or else alone.


    As the new year begins, let us also start anew. I’m delighted to extend, on behalf of the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and in my own name, new year’s greeting and sincere wishes to YOULIN magazine’s staff and readers.

    Only in hard times can courage and perseverance be manifested. Only with courage can we live to the fullest. 2020 was an extraordinary year. Confronted by the COVID-19 pandemic, China and Pakistan supported each other and took on the challenge in solidarity. The ironclad China-Pakistan friendship grew stronger as time went by. The China Pakistan Economic Corridor projects advanced steadily in difficult times, become a standard-bearer project of the Belt and Road Initiative in balancing pandemic prevention and project achievement. The handling capacity of the Gwadar Port has continued to rise and Afghanistan transit trade through the port has officially been launched. The Karakoram Highway Phase II upgrade project is fully open to traffic. The Lahore Orange Line project has been put into operation. The construction of Matiari-Lahore HVDC project was fully completed. A batch of green and clean energy projects, such as the Kohala and Azad Pattan hydropower plants have been substantially promoted. Development agreement for the Rashakai SEZ has been signed. The China-Pakistan Community of Shared Future has become closer and closer.

    Reviewing the past and looking to the future, we are confident to write a brilliant new chapter. The year 2021 is the 100th birthday of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the 70th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Pakistan. The 100-year journey of CPC surges forward with great momentum and China-Pakistan relationship has flourished in the past 70 years. Standing at a new historic point, China is willing to work together with Pakistan to further implement the consensus reached by the leaders of the two countries, connect the CPEC cooperation with the vision of the “Naya Pakistan”, promote the long-term development of the China-Pakistan All-weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership with love, dedication and commitment. Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the founding father of Pakistan said, “We are going through fire. The sunshine has yet to come.” Yes, Pakistan’s best days are ahead, China will stand with Pakistan firmly all the way.

    YOULIN magazine is dedicated to promoting cultural exchanges between China and Pakistan and is a window for Pakistani friends to learn about China, especially the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. It is hoped that with the joint efforts of China and Pakistan, YOULIN can listen more to the voices of readers in China and Pakistan, better play its role as a bridge to promote more effectively people-to-people bond.

    Last but not least, I would like to wish all the staff and readers of YOULIN a warm and prosper year in 2021.

    Nong Rong Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of
    The People’s Republic of China to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
    January 2021