Haya Zaidi Pakistan, b. 1993
A Visitor, 2026
Acrylics, textiles and teawash on canvas
40 x 32 in.
(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)
(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)
9435
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A Visitor, 2026; engages the architectural motif of the 'jharokha'-a screened balcony historically associated with gendered visibility-as a site through which interiority, surveillance, and longing are negotiated. Traditionally functioning as...
A Visitor, 2026; engages the architectural motif of the 'jharokha'-a screened balcony historically associated with gendered visibility-as a site through which interiority, surveillance, and longing are negotiated. Traditionally functioning as a threshold that allowed women to observe the public realm without being seen, the jharokha becomes here both a symbolic and psychological structure. The composition stages a spatial reversal: a female figure occupies the exterior, positioned calmly beneath the architectural frame, while a mythic presence emerges from within. Once aligned with fear and restriction, this interior space now appears to contain the very anxieties it once projected outward. The figure's stillness and lack of reaction signal a shift in power-what was once internalized as fear is rendered distant, observable, and no longer directive.
Above, a floating female form moves freely across a field of draped, wind-swept fabric, introducing a contrasting register of weightlessness and release. This upper register operates less as narrative than as psychic projection, suggesting a state unbound by the constraints of enclosure or surveillance. The fluidity of the surrounding textiles reinforces this sense of permeability, dissolving the rigidity of architectural limits. Materially, the work incorporates fabrics sourced from garments worn by women within the artist's personal community. These textiles function as embodied traces, carrying with them the memory of lived negotiation within public space. Their presence situates the work within a collective register, where acts of movement, occupation, and defiance are both intimate and shared. Suspended between containment and emergence, the painting reframes the jharokha not as a fixed boundary but as a site of transition-where fear is externalized, agency is reclaimed, and the possibility of inhabiting space on one's own terms begins to take form.
Above, a floating female form moves freely across a field of draped, wind-swept fabric, introducing a contrasting register of weightlessness and release. This upper register operates less as narrative than as psychic projection, suggesting a state unbound by the constraints of enclosure or surveillance. The fluidity of the surrounding textiles reinforces this sense of permeability, dissolving the rigidity of architectural limits. Materially, the work incorporates fabrics sourced from garments worn by women within the artist's personal community. These textiles function as embodied traces, carrying with them the memory of lived negotiation within public space. Their presence situates the work within a collective register, where acts of movement, occupation, and defiance are both intimate and shared. Suspended between containment and emergence, the painting reframes the jharokha not as a fixed boundary but as a site of transition-where fear is externalized, agency is reclaimed, and the possibility of inhabiting space on one's own terms begins to take form.