Nasreen Askari is an author, curator, director and co-founder of the Mohatta Palace Museum in Karachi.[1][2][3] Nasreen Askari has curated over 25 exhibitions at the Mohatta, now widely regarded as one of the leading museums in South Asia,[4] In addition, she has co-curated exhibitions at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh and the Paisley Museum in Glasgow.[5] She received the President of Pakistan’s Pride of Performance Award in 2008 for her services to the arts and culture of Pakistan.[6][circular reference]

Photograph of the Director of Mohatta Palace Museum, Karachi

Personal life edit

Early life edit

Nasreen Askari was born in Karachi in 1950, the youngest of six siblings, to parents who had migrated from India in 1946. She was educated at the Karachi Grammar School which she joined at the age of five and graduated as Head of School in 1968.[7] She studied dental surgery at the Sind University, Jamshoro and graduated in 1973 with honours. After a year at the Jinnah Post Graduate Medical Hospital, Karachi as a junior surgeon, she left for London for post graduate qualifications in 1975.[8]

In London, she met Hasan Askari, and they were married in Karachi in October 1976.

1977-1997 edit

As her husband was an investment banker, Nasreen's career was affected by his travels. The couple left for Hong Kong in late 1980 (where she re-qualified as a dentist). In 1985, when her husband was transferred to Tokyo and she was expected to re-qualify again as a dentist, she gave up the profession and enrolled at Sophia University, Tokyo to study Asian Art and Civilisation. During this time, Iman, her son and Sehr, her daughter, were born. [citation needed] While in Tokyo, she added Japanese to her repertoire of languages which include Urdu, Gujarati and French in addition to English.

Career edit

Colours of the Indus edit

Nasreen's interest in textiles was first kindled while a student in Jamshoro, Sindh where she began her collection. By 1997, she had a formidable personal collection of textiles from all over Pakistan with a focus on Sindh. In 1997, on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Pakistan, she was asked to co-curate the first ever exhibition on Pakistani costume and textiles in the United Kingdom. The exhibition opened at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London to critical acclaim in October 1997.[9] Initially scheduled to run for three months, it was extended by popular demand to seven months and subsequently travelled to the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh. The accompanying publication had two re-prints, was an Arts Book Club selection and is still in print, as the seminal work on the textiles of the country.[10]

The most significant aspect of this exhibition and the accompanying publication was, that for the first time, it identified textiles from the regions comprising Pakistan as being distinct from neighboring areas. It went further by arguing that Pakistan was the crucible where the textile traditions of Central Asia and South Asia melded to influence each other. Before this, the textiles of Pakistan were subsumed into a generic 'Indian' category. This distinctiveness is now widely accepted.

Mohatta Palace Museum edit

In 1998, Nasreen Askari was invited by the Trustees of the Mohatta Palace to return to Karachi to establish the Mohatta Palace Museum.[11] She continues as the Director of the Museum. Its first exhibition, Treasures of the Talpurs, opened on September 15, 1999[12] and since then, the Museum has held approximately twenty five exhibitions.

Her latest book, The Flowering Desert, has been well received by critics[13][14] and was chosen as one of the twelve books of the year in 2020 by the Crafts Council of the U.K.[15] It was also longlisted for an annual Book Award in 2019 by the Textile Society of America.

Publications (either as author, co-author or editor) edit

  • Colours of the Indus: Costumes and Textiles of Pakistan (London, 1997)[16]
  • Uncut Cloth (London, 1999)[17]
  • Treasures of the Talpurs (Karachi, 1999)[18]
  • Gandhara: The Art of Divinity (Karachi, 2000)
  • Jamil Naqsh: A Retrospective (Karachi, 2003)
  • Textiles from India: The Global Trade (Calcutta, 2003; article)
  • Tale of the Tile: The Ceramic Traditions of Pakistan (Karachi, 2011; reprinted 2019)[19][20]
  • Thar (Karachi, 2017)
  • The Flowering Desert: Textiles from Sindh (London, 2019)[21]
  • Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion (Berg Publisher, Oxford and New York, 2010) article in volume 4 on Pakistan.
  • Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Worlds Textiles (Bloomsbury, London to be published 2023) article on Pakistan volume on Embellishment.

An important aspect of Nasreen Askari's books is that several of them are now accepted as the standard reference work on traditional Pakistani textiles. Her publications are now regularly used by all three international auction houses to authenticate items on sale.[22][23][24] In this respect, Nasreen Askari has tried to establish a tradition of rigorous scholarship for publications from Pakistan.

Awards edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Iqbal, Nosheen (27 October 2019). "Fabric of a nation: couple bring the lost art of Pakistan to the world". The Guardian.
  2. ^ "Mohatta Palace Museum". Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  3. ^ Qamar, Saadia (February 20, 2017). "Admire the riches of Kashmir in Karachi". The Express Tribune.
  4. ^ "About Us". Mohatta Palace Museum. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  5. ^ "OXFORD ASIAN TEXTILE GROUP" (PDF). June 1999. Retrieved 25 October 2019. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ "Pride of Performance Awards (2000–2009)". Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  7. ^ Iqbal, Nosheen (2019-10-27). "Fabric of a nation: couple bring the lost art of Pakistan to the world". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 2020-03-05.
  8. ^ Barbieri, Annalisa. "Pakistan stands proud at V&A". The Independent. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  9. ^ Barbieri, Annalisa. "Pakistan stands proud at V&A". The Independent. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  10. ^ Deitz, Paula (February 1, 1998). "ARTS/ARTIFACTS; Textiles as Rich and Varied As the History of Pakistan". The New York Times.
  11. ^ Shaikh, Sadeem (March 29, 2015). "The Undying Grandeur of the Mohatta Palace Museum". Youlin Magazine. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  12. ^ "Treasures of the Talpurs: Collections from the Courts of Sindh". Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  13. ^ "Hali". www.tribalartreference.com. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
  14. ^ Raza, Rosemary (2020-03-14). "The Flowering Desert: Textiles from Sindh". Asian Affairs. 51 (2): 428–430. doi:10.1080/03068374.2020.1747873. ISSN 0306-8374. S2CID 219098535.
  15. ^ "12 craft books to fill your mind with making". www.craftscouncil.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
  16. ^ Colours of the Indus : Costume and Textiles of Pakistan. Merrell Holberton in association with the Victoria and Albert Museum. 1997. ISBN 1858940451.
  17. ^ Uncut Cloth. Merrell Holberton. 1999. ISBN 9781858940830.
  18. ^ Treasures of the Talpurs : Collections from the Courts of Sindh. Mohatta Palace Museum. 1999. ISBN 9789698100155.
  19. ^ Siddiqi, Ayesha R (December 21, 2012). "Tale of the Tile: A mystical journey". The Express Tribune.
  20. ^ Tale of the Tile : The Ceramic Traditions of Pakistan. Mohatta Palace Museum. 2011. ISBN 978-9699535017.
  21. ^ The Flowering Desert. Textiles from Sindh. Paul Holberton Publishing. November 2019. ISBN 9781911300717.
  22. ^ Christies (2015). Arts of the Islamic and Indian World. London: Christies. pp. Lot 140.
  23. ^ Sotheby's (2019). Modern and Contemporary South Asian Art. New York: Sotheby's. pp. Lot 85.
  24. ^ Bonhams (2020). Islamic and Indian Art. London: Bonhams. pp. Lot 193.