Zehra Laila Javeri

Zehra Laila Javeri (Urdu: زہرہ لیلی جویری; born on 15 October 1971) is a Pakistani artist. She currently resides in Karachi, Pakistan. Javeri's first solo exhibition, titled 'Weeds', opened at Canvas Gallery, Karachi in January 2014. Javeri was greatly influenced by her aunt, artist Laila Shahzada.[1] Javeri's second non-solo show, titled 'Pakistan Art Today', was held in the Lalit Hotel in Delhi, India.[1]

Zehra Laila Javeri
Born (1971-10-15) 15 October 1971
Karachi, Pakistan
Statusmarried
Other namesZehra Bukhari
OccupationArtist

Early life

Zehra Javeri is the daughter of jeweller Hassan Ali Mohammad Javeri and Ayesha Javeri. She has four siblings, including famous photographer Tapu Javeri and senior civil servant Rabiya Javeri Agha. She went to Convent of Jesus and Mary for her early education and then to Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts, to study anthropology. After that she went to England for her Masters at the London School of Economics and returned to Pakistan.

Javeri (from the family that lent its name to Mumbai's Zaveri Bazar) traces her roots back to Jamnagar, Gujarat, where her ancestors were court jewellers to the Nawabs of Kutch.[2]

Career

Javeri has been painting and creating art from her early years. [3] She had her first show at the Canvas Gallery in Karachi, entitled 'Weeds'. This show had been under wraps for nearly 20 years. "She has incorporated many global themes into her work, especially regarding gender," said Marjorie Husain, a Pakistani critic, 'as she pointed at a painting that was about the Serbian War.'[1]

Her second non-solo show, 'Pakistan Art Today', was held at the Lalit Hotel in Delhi. It featured the work of 11 Pakistani artists and "was curated by Islamabad based gallery MyArtWorld and formed part of the larger Aalishan Pakistan trade show to Delhi". Javeri was accompanied by many other Pakistani artists such as sculptor Amin Gulgee, photographer Tapu Javeri, miniaturist Sahyr Sayed and pop artist Summayya Jillani. "The highlight of the exhibition was the participation of art icon Satish Gujral who lit the lamp to open the show and also initiated the live painting." In fact, Javeri and a few other Pakistani artists, created a painting with Gujral,[1] and commented "It was a remarkable opportunity to paint with the legendary and very gracious Indian artist Satish Gujral".[3] Javeri hopes to keep pursuing her career as an artist and in February 2015 said she was working on her next exhibition, which would revolve around her city, Karachi.[3]

gollark: Isn't this, er, politics? Again?
gollark: Wikipedia, font of infinite knowledge, says that the Boötes void is "only" 330 million light years across.
gollark: I do wonder what void that's actually referring to.
gollark: I'm not sure what void that's talking about, but I'm pretty sure most of them do have *some* things in them.
gollark: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_cosmic_structures#List_of_largest_voids>

References

  1. "Debut exhibition: Zehra Javeri unveils 20 years' worth of artworks". The Express Tribune. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  2. "Sexy and they know it". The Telegraph. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  3. "UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL WITH ZEHRA JAVERI". Sunday. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.