Quiet Voices
The American painter Mary Cassatt moved to Paris in 1874 and
after a visit to her studio by the
French artist, Edgar Degas, the two instantly recognized they had a shared
sensibility. This began a lifelong association. Unlike sculptors Camille
Claudel and Rodin, there was no romance or power play – just an equal meeting
of the minds. In 2014, the National
Gallery of Art honoured this association with an exhibition “Degas/Cassatt”.
More interesting than the similarities are the subtle differences in their works.
While stylistically similar to Degas and other Impressionist artists, the
subject matter of the work of Mary Cassatt is seen as ground breaking in the
context of her time.
Susan Fillin Yeh notes Cassatt does not conform to male
images of women. Her women are shown
absorbed in their own independent lives whether in domestic settings or
outdoors. They read, sew , bathe their children, have tea with friends, pick
fruit in the orchard or go to the opera alone. They are not decorative and many
are older women. The easy companionship
of female friends had not yet been explored
in western art or literature.
Cassatt believed “ a
woman should be someone not something”.
One of her much acclaimed works is “Reading Le Figaro”, a portrait of
her mother reading the French daily newspaper, an intellectual pursuit usually considered a
male activity. A large mirror behind her goes unnoticed by her, in sharp
contrast to the use of mirrors as symbols of vanity in earlier paintings such
as Velasquez’s Venus.
The term, Female Gaze, emerged in the context of films that depicted how
women view other women, men and the world around them. There is a growing
number of women directors and scriptwriters across the world, including
Sangeeta, Pakistan’s most prolific female director. Most follow commercial
trends, some promote feminist protagonists, but a few such as Jane Campion, present
female characters in real settings of emotional conflict without , as Sue
Gillett says, “telling her audience what to think or how to respond”. In all
the strident gender politics, little attention has been given to how women view
the world when left with their own thoughts.
Travelogues and letters written by women give valuable
insights into the views and desires of women.
Lady Mary Montagu’s 1717 account of her visit to Ottoman lands provide a
contrast to the heavily judgmental accounts written by men. Charmed by the women she encountered, she
presented an enlightened and advanced society. Lucie Gordon travelling to Egypt
in 1892, describes with an undercurrent of envy, a female beduoin travelling on
her camel, “ she is a virgin and fond of travelling and of men’s society… no
one seemed surprised, no one stared”. The letters of the Raj women give intimate
accounts of life in India and Africa often seen as freer than the restrictive
society they grew up in.
Closer to home, aapbeeti or autobiographies written by women - Shehr
Bano Begum in 1887, Sultan Jehan Begum 1903, Atiya Faizi 1906, Ada Jafri, Hamida
Akhtar Hussain and Kishwer Naheed, in
1995, and the 16th C historical account
of Emperor Humayun by his sister Gul Badan Begum, provide a female perspective
of events. A charming painting by Sahifa
Banu , a princess in the court of Jahangir, and the only woman artist to gain
fame in the Mughal era, shows her painting a self-portrait in the intimate
surroundings of the harem.
In the struggle against patriarchy, contemporary Pakistani women
artists focus on the suppression rather than the expression of the female
voice. The quiet female voice, often drowned out by feminist protest, needs to be
heard to complete the tapestry of social history.
Durriya Kazi
March 23, 2020
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