Abstrakt: |
This article explores the journeys of two key twentieth-century artists from East Pakistan--Zainul Abedin and S.M. Sultan--to and through post-imperial London in the early 1950s. Sultan's cosmopolitan journeying, from Calcutta through Karachi and Lahore, to the USA and through London, to eventually settle in the countryside of Eastern Bengal, left traces in his practice, philosophy, and the narratives that have come to surround his work. Abedin's London stay was both as an artist from the former colonies and as an East Pakistani cultural bureaucrat representing the post-colonial nationstate of Pakistan. These two very different journeys are approached by the co-authors from two different disciplinary traditions (anthropology and history), to bring into focus the concept of "journeys of post-colonial modernisms." We show how the case of East Pakistan, with its incomplete decolonisation, shaped the travels and trajectories of these two artists and the ways in which their work was received and exhibited. We also show that this cannot be understood without the context of the Cold War, which facilitated particular routes for travel to and through art institutions globally, and which was to become crucial in shaping practice as well as conferring canonicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |