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Komail Aijazuddin Wounded Icon

Komail Aijazuddin
Wounded Icon
2016
Oil and gold leaf on panel
36 x 24 in.
 

Komail Aijazuddin Angry Icon

Komail Aijazuddin
Angry Icon
2016
Oil and gold leaf on panel
36 x 24 in.
 

Komail Aijazuddin Icon with Arrows

Komail Aijazuddin
Icon with Arrows
2016
Oil and gold leaf on panel
36 x 24 in.
 

Irfan Hasan Mirza Abu'l Hassan, After Thomas Lawrence

Irfan Hasan
Mirza Abu'l Hassan, After Thomas Lawrence
2016
Opaque watercolor on paper
20 x 15 in.

Irfan Hasan Kain Zabija Abia, After Daniele Crepsi

Irfan Hasan
Kain Zabija Abia, After Daniele Crepsi
2016
Opaque watercolor on paper
55 x 40 in.
 

Irfan Hasan Profile of Moroccan Man, After Josep Tapiró Baró

Irfan Hasan
Profile of Moroccan Man, After Josep Tapiró Baró
2016
Opaque watercolor on paper
20 x 15 in.
 

Saad Qureshi All Our Yesterdays

Saad Qureshi
All Our Yesterdays
2014
Charcoal, pastel, Indian ink on gaboon plywood
47 x 67 in.

Saad Qureshi To The Last Drop

Saad Qureshi
To The Last Drop
2014
Charcoal, pastel, Indian ink on gaboon plywood
20 x 25 in.
 

Saad Qureshi Honorable Wounds

Saad Qureshi
Honorable Wounds
2014
Charcoal, pastel, Indian ink on gaboon plywood
20 x 25 in.

Hiba Schahbaz Untitled

Hiba Schahbaz
Untitled
2016
Tea and watercolor on paper
22.5 x 31.5 in.
 

Hiba Schahbaz

Hiba Schahbaz
Self-Portrait after The Grande Odalisque
2016
Tea and watercolor on paper
22.5 x 31.5 in.

Hiba Schahbaz The Three Graces

Hiba Schahbaz
The Three Graces
2016
Watercolor, ink and poster paint on paper
82 x 64 in.
 

Saba Khan The Smuggler's Drawing Room

Saba Khan
The Smuggler's Drawing Room
2016
Crystals, beads and acrylic on canvas
48 x 96 in.

Saba Khan Dream House on a Rainy Day

Saba Khan
Dream House on a Rainy Day
2015
Crystals, beads and acrylic on canvas
7 x 9.5 in.
 

Saba Khan Stay Blessed

Saba Khan
Stay Blessed
2015
Crystals, beads and acrylic on canvas
9.5 x 12.5 in.
 

Saba Khan Cake in the Drawing Room with the Bad Painting

Saba Khan
Cake in the Drawing Room with the Bad Painting
2015
Crystals, beads and acrylic on canvas
30 x 22 in.
 

Saba Khan Cakes in Plastic Boxes

Saba Khan
Cakes in Plastic Boxes
2015
Crystals, beads and acrylic on canvas
22 x 30 in.
 

Salman Toor Imaginary Multicultural Audience

Salman Toor
Imaginary Multicultural Audience
2016
Oil on panel
24 x 30 in.
 

Salman Toor Humiliated Ancestor #1

Salman Toor
Humiliated Ancestor #1
2016
Oil on panel
24 x 12 in.
 

Salman Toor Humiliated Ancestor #2

Salman Toor
Humiliated Ancestor #2
2016
Oil on panel
10 x 8 in.
 

Salman Toor Humiliated Ancestor #3

Salman Toor
Humiliated Ancestor #3
2016
Oil on panel
14 x 14 in.

Salman Toor Humiliated Ancestor #4

Salman Toor
Humiliated Ancestor #4
2016
Oil on panel
14 x 11 in.

Salman Toor Humiliated Ancestor #5

Salman Toor
Humiliated Ancestor #5
2016
Oil on panel
10 x 8 in.

Salman ToorUntitled2016Oil on panel12 x 9 in.

Salman Toor
Untitled
2016
Oil on panel
12 x 9 in.

Aicon Gallery is pleased to present Go Figure, an exhibition curated by artist Salman Toor, featuring the work of Komail Aijazuddin, Irfan Hasan, Saba Khan, Saad Qureshi, and Hiba Schahbaz, as well as the curator’s own work.

This is the first gathering of these six artists in a U.S. group show. They are from different provinces, cities and social strata of Pakistan or the Pakistani diaspora in the United States and United Kingdom. Their work shows an impulse toward the illustrative, the graphic and the sensual. Their pictures range from imagined portraits, inner landscapes, female empowerment, quotations from Western Art History, queerness and kitsch. These artists are urban people but they play with pertinent particularities from their personal histories and those of their chosen cities, or homelands.

Irfan Hasan graduated from the National College of Arts in Lahore. Hasan focuses on an internalization, an absorption of European Old Master paintings from various periods of European history into the technical complexities used in traditional miniature painting on handmade paper. While Hasan’s pictures point to the misleading nature of veneers and the profound way they shape our view of Art History and the world, these are complimented by Saad Qureshi’s multimedia images of barren landscapes as inner, spiritual worlds, moving between abstraction and representation. 

Hiba Schahbaz, who finished at Pratt Institute and now lives and works in Brooklyn, does nude portraits, challenging perceived ideas about the prescribed role of images and women in Muslim cultures. Komail Aijazuddin, also a graduate of Pratt Institute, uses various traditions of religious art, playing with notions of belief, divinity, and blasphemy. His portraits/altarpieces of virile, sometimes hostile, young men combine the centrality of the idea of martyrdom in the Shia sect of Islam with a Byzantine visual vocabulary to create what he calls "Angry Icons.”

Saba Khan, who graduated from the National College of Arts and Boston University, transforms the cheap local Pakistani middle class interior aesthetic into a celebration of over-sweetened bad taste with gleaming decorative materials. Following on his recent solo show at Aicon gallery in October 2015, Salman Toor paints imaginary multiethnic crowds, pointing to the anxieties of our post 9/11 world, and a psychological space where the global and personal concerns intersect.