Haya Zaidi Pakistan, b. 1993
(101.6 x 81.28 cm)
Frame: 42 3/4 x 34 1/2 x 2 in.
(108.59 x 87.63 x 5.08 cm)
Further images
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 1
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 2
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 3
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 4
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 5
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 6
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 7
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 8
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 9
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 10
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 11
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 12
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 13
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 14
)
-
(View a larger image of thumbnail 15
)
To the right, a larger female figure emerges, scaled beyond the immediate scene yet equally embedded within the encroaching landscape. Her composed, unwavering gaze and grounded posture introduce a counterpoint to the vulnerability of the chariot's interior. Rather than intervening directly, her presence operates as a form of watchfulness-protective without being possessive, assertive without spectacle. The surrounding environment-dense, enveloping, and resistant-echoes broader conditions of restricted movement within public space. Yet the work resists framing this condition solely through danger. Instead, it foregrounds alternative structures of support: protection is reimagined as lateral and collective, circulating between women rather than imposed from an external male authority. Materially, the incorporation of textiles sourced from garments worn by women within the artist's personal community embeds the surface with lived experience. These fabrics function as intimate traces, carrying the memory of everyday navigation, caution, and resilience, and extending the work into a shared, embodied register. Suspended between entrapment and agency, the painting does not resolve its tensions. Instead, it proposes a reframing of vulnerability-not as weakness, but as a condition through which awareness, adaptation, and forms of mutual care emerge.