
The prominent Indian-American artist Zarina Hashmi, who would have turned 86 today, is honored in today’s Google Doodle. The doodle was created by New York-based guest artist Tara Anand as a tribute to Hashmi’s trademark geometrical and minimalistic sculptures and prints.
Hashmi was renowned for her impressive sculptures, prints, and artworks, according to the media. Her paintings expertly used geometric and minimalistic forms to arouse strong spiritual feelings in the viewers.
Zarina Hashmi, who was born in 1937 in the Indian village of Aligarh, had a pleasant childhood with her four siblings up until the partition of India, when they had to move to Karachi in the newly formed nation of Pakistan along with countless others.
Hashmi married a young diplomat when she was 21 and set out on a voyage that brought her around the globe. She got the chance to delve into the world of printmaking and get fully immersed in the influences of the modernist and minimalist art movements during her trips to Bangkok, Paris, and Japan.
After that, Hashmi worked as a professor at the New York Feminist Art Institute, a place dedicated to giving women artists the same educational opportunities as men. She assisted in co-curating the 1980 AIR Gallery exhibition “Dialectics of Isolation: An Exhibition of Third World Women Artists of the United States”. This exhibition was essential in highlighting the creative voices and viewpoints of underrepresented women artists.
Hashmi became well-known for her entrancing intaglio and woodcut prints, which expertly incorporated minutely detailed representations of residences and cityscapes she had encountered throughout her life.
Her status as an Indian lady born into the Muslim faith, together with her early experiences of frequent uprooting, had a significant impact on her artistic expression. In particular, Hashmi’s artwork frequently mixed Islamic ornamental elements with exact geometrical designs that emitted great aesthetic appeal.
Due to Zarina Hashmi’s deft use of minimalist and subdued geometrical aesthetics, her early creative works have been likened to well-known minimalist painters like Sol LeWitt.
Her placement in the permanent collections of esteemed organizations like the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Whitney Museum of American Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and many more is proof that her work continues to enthrall viewers throughout the world.
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