Prison and Creativity
“San
Quentin, what good do you think you do?
Do
you think I'll be different when you're through?
You
bend my heart and mind and you warp my soul,
And
your stone walls turn my blood a little cold.”
Although Johnny Cash never went to
prison, his iconic songs written for and performed in prisons, made prison
reform authorities sit up.
Prison is a strange institution.
Punishment? Reform? Rehabilitation? Through the ages, prisoners were always used
for free labour – to build monuments, railways or work farms. Sometime these tasks were creative in nature, such as the
mosaic floors of the Victoria and Albert Museum that were cut and assembled by
women prisoners, or the ceramics or carpets made by prisoners in Pakistan.
With prison reform, vocational
training was introduced and prisoners had the option of earning money. It was seen as a way to offer options that
could change lives of criminals upon release from jail. It was intended as a form of industry.
In 2005, Nusrat Manghan, IG Prisons
of Sindh and the artist, Sikander Ali Jogi, decided to experiment with teaching
fine art to prisoners, to allow self-
expression and provide spiritual solace.
In 2007, a room with a sign saying ‘Art Class’ was opened in Karachi
Jail, and three students enrolled, one serving time for drug trafficking, one
for murder and one a political prisoner. Since their release one is earning
good money as a street artist in UK, another as a painter in Dubai. The
whereabouts of the political activist are not known.
More than half the prisoners in
Karachi jail are under trial, and not yet convicts. One cannot imagine their
state of mind waiting, often years, before their case comes to trial. Some found their peace in art. Sikander has
taught 1200 prisoners over ten years, and in 2013, art classes began in the
women’s prison as well. Exhibitions are held both in the prison and in the
city’s galleries. The artist prisoners are relocated to cells near the now
expanded studio, forming an unusual artist’s commune.
History is filled with people
whose creative spirit triumphed over the dehumanization of imprisonment.
Ibn Maqlah, who transformed the Arabic script from basic
Kufic strokes to a harmoniously structured art form, was imprisoned
three times, had first his right, then his left hand, and then his tongue cut off, but his creative
energy remained intact.
Activists gained fire and
inspiration from their incarcerations. Thoreau wrote his essay on “Civil Disobedience”,
Martin Luther King Jr, his “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, Nelson Mandela, Muhammad
Ali Jauhar , Napoleon and Gandhi, wrote
their autobiographies, Wittgenstein and Gramsci
formulated their philosophies. Even
Hitler wrote Mein Kampf during his incarceration
Many poets and novelists composed
some of their best known works from prison. Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Mahmoud
Darwesh, Hasrat Mohani, Habib Jalib, Oscar
Wilde, Dostoyevsky, Voltaire,
Solzhenitsyn to name a few. Cervantes wrote Don Quixote while in prison. Rustichello da Pisa , penned the recounting
of the travels of his fellow prisoner, Marco Polo. Thomas Malory wrote ‘Le Morte D’Arthur’,
John Bunyan the ‘Pilgrim’s Progress’, Sir Walter Raleigh wrote his ‘History of
the World’ and many sonnets.
Perhaps
Oscar Wilde’s ‘Little tent of blue,
Which prisoners call the sky’, where walls stand
between the individual and his freedom, enforces
self-reflection. In the grim homogeneity of the prison, creativity is one way
to ensure individuality is not lost.
Many inventions also came out of prison:
the game of squash, the modern toothbrush,
America’s first assault rifle, the M1 Carbine . Stalin imprisoned over
400 aviation engineers and then created the “Experimental Design Bureau” in
prison when he realized he needed their input during the war.
Fewer artists have ended up in
prison, not even those who committed murders such as Caravaggio and Cellini or broke the law in
other ways : Picasso was not prosecuted
for receiving stolen art works, Banksy was not arrested for vandalism. The crimes of those who have the backing of
patronage, or a successful clientele seem to escape imprisonment. In UK , less
well known graffiti artists are sent to prison at the rate of one a month,
sometimes for as long as two years. The
artist, Ai Weiwei, son of one of Mao’s companions, and internationally known,
was placed under house arrest, but continues to have international exhibitions. Perhaps art works being unique, usually
privately owned, are less threatening to authority, whereas writings can be widely
disseminated.
Picasso said “We artists are
indestructible; even in a prison, or in a concentration camp, I would be
almighty in my own world of art, even if I had to paint my pictures with my wet
tongue on the dusty floor of my cell.”
Durriya Kazi
Karachi May 2017
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