Sheherezade Alam
Sheherezade Alam (19 June 1948 – 19 May 2022) was a Pakistani-Canadian ceramist.[1][2][3]
Early life and education
[edit]Alam was born in 1948 in Lahore, Pakistan to Mahmoud Alam, a Pakistani former tennis player and his wife, Surayya, in Lahore.[4] She had two brothers, Asad and Shaban. Brought up in Lahore, she completed her FA from its Kinnaird College.[4] She went on to obtain her Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Design with a distinction in ceramics from Lahore's National College of Arts (NCA), where she studied under the country's first ceramist, Salahuddin Mian. She later became an artist-in-residence at Yale University. She taught at the NCA, as well as at Bilkent University (Ankara, Turkey).[4]
Personal life
[edit]In 1971, she married Zahoor ul Akhlaq (1941–1999), a painter, and the couple had two daughters, Jahanara (1974–1999) and Nurjahan (b. 1979). Zahoor and Jahanara were murdered in their home in Lahore in 1999 by a visiting acquaintance, Shahzad Butt, a roti merchant of the city. The killer could give no reason for having turned his gun on them.[5]
Career
[edit]Shows
[edit]Group
[edit]- 1980: Sultan Art Gallery, Kuwait
- 1983: Group Show, British Council, Islamabad
- 1983: Group Show, Rohtas Gallery, Islamabad
- 1988: Joint exhibition, Yale University, New Haven, USA
- 1995 to 1999: Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition (yearly)
- 2009: Group Show, Vogue Art Gallery, Islamabad.[6]
Solo
[edit]- 1990: Chawkandi Arts, Karachi
- 1993: Ish Gallery, Ankara, Turkey
- 1994: Bismillah, Arcadia Art Gallery, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- 1996: Clay Continuum, Gardiner Art Museum of Ceramic Art, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- 2004: Offering Bowls, Arcadia Art Gallery, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- 2005: Laali, Ceramic Installation, Private Residence, Lahore
- 2006: Laali, The garden of Imran Mir, Karachi
References
[edit]- ^ "Pakistani-Canadian ceramicist channelled joy and grief into her work". The Globe and Mail. 8 June 2022.
- ^ Shuaib, Haroon. "Sheherezade Alam: A Soulful Life of a Kooza-Gar (Vessel-maker)".
- ^ Acclaimed ceramist Sheherezade Alam passes away, tribune.com.pk. Accessed 28 July 2022.
- ^ a b c "Bio". Sheherezade Alam. Retrieved 26 October 2010.
- ^ Circumstances of murders of Zahoor ul Akhlaq and his daughter, Jahanara, dawn.com. Accessed 28 July 2022.
- ^ Group exhibition opens at Vogue Art Gallery Daily Times 21 November 2009. 26 October 2010.
- 1948 births
- 2022 deaths
- 20th-century Canadian artists
- Canadian ceramists
- Canadian potters
- Pakistani emigrants to Canada
- Pakistani ceramists
- Pakistani potters
- Kinnaird College for Women University alumni
- National College of Arts alumni
- Artists from Lahore
- Women potters
- Pakistani women ceramists
- 20th-century ceramists
- 20th-century Pakistani artists
- 21st-century ceramists
- 21st-century Pakistani artists
- Canadian women ceramists