Add The Wire As Your Trusted Source
For the best experience, open
https://m.thewire.in
on your mobile browser.
AdvertisementAdvertisement

In Photos | An Iconic Museum For – and By – M.F. Husain in Doha

Everything from the installations to the building itself was conceptualised by Husain before his death.
Everything from the installations to the building itself was conceptualised by Husain before his death.
in photos   an iconic museum for – and by – m f  husain in doha
Museum building sketch by Husain (2008). Courtesy: Qatar Foundation
Advertisement

The walls curve and glow with thousands of pieces of pastel blue tiles covering the façade of a building which suddenly breaks into a sharp sheen of a large and elegant arched door in gold.

A coloured sketch of a blue building made by the grand master of modern Indian art, M.F. Husain, in 2008, has finally seen the light of the day. That sketch today stands in the form a museum covering over 3,000 square meters in Doha, his adopted home. The letters inscribed on the façade of this building read ‘Lawh Wa Qalam’ in Arabic, which means The Tablet and The Pen – referring to the divine written word. But in this case, Husain chose to reinterpret the phrase for being the author of the final chapter of his own story.

Aerial shot of Lawh Wa Qalam M.F. Husain Museum (2025). Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Lawh Wa Qalam M. F. Husain Museum. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Lawh Wa Qalam M. F. Husain Museum. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Advertisement

Architect of the museum Martand Khosla had to imagine several conversations with the artist while making sure the building carried the ethos and look of the sketch but at the same time was functional and technically sound. “Some interpretations are literal but some are metaphorical, like his cultural links and larger sense of identity. For example, different type of arches of a place, references to Yemen or Central Asia. We were thinking at several levels.”

This final chapter has come to Husain posthumously, far away from India. A promise kept by his friend and patron, Her Highness Sheikha Moza bint Nasser of Qatar, who spearheaded and helped realise his dream, even if it took 14 long years to complete after his death in 2011. The Lawh Wa Qalam is part of the international circuit of art. It is sitting in the middle of the East and the West. It will not just preserve the story of Husain but will also bridge two parts of the world and help create a new dialogue.

Advertisement

M.F. Husain's work projected on the museum building at the grand opening. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

The Lawh Wa Qalam inauguration. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Advertisement

The year 2025 will be remembered as a year when Husain made the biggest comeback in the world of art. In March, he became the most expensive Indian artist ever with a record-breaking auction of his work ‘Gram Yatra’ (1954) for Rs 118 crore. And November marks the unthinkable finale for an artist who planned for his legacy beyond his life.

Advertisement

The Opening Night gala of the museum started with a grand video show that played across the huge façade of the museum building. Qatari Royalty, global collectors Lakshmi Mittal, Gauri Khan, Radhikaraje Gaekwad of Baroda, Indian artists Subodh Gupta and Riyas Komu along with many other admirers, watched in awe as Husain’s paintings moved across the façade in animated glory, with his birds flying across the Mumbai sky, his Kathakali dancers teasing you with their eyes and his horses galloping in full force from the world of Ashoka to his camels finding peace in the desert sand. “My long brush like the camel lost in a desert has found the golden sand in Qatar,” said Husain.

In a letter to the Sheikha, he had proposed, “99 paintings of Arab culture dating back to Babylon Era. An installation of 5 horses in crystal as a symbol of strength. A museum to be built to house the collection of my Indian heritage – paintings, sculptures, films and written words. A museum to be built, designed by me. Please consider me a small soldier in the army of your cultural force.”

In response to that note, the Sheikha finally delivered on her promise, “I am delighted to fulfil the dream of this late, esteemed artist by inaugurating the museum, which will stand as a new landmark in Education City showcasing pages from his life and a collection of his works.”

The Lawh Wa Qalam museum. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

The Lawh Wa Qalam museum. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

The Lawh Wa Qalam museum. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

The museum has over 150 works of Husain across two levels. One collection displays works that he made across decades of his life in India, including a few items close to his heart– his last used paint palette, brushes, last worn kurta with paint splashes and his Indian passport. It was an identity booklet that he gave up after much pain and struggle in the face of heightened stress that he faced amidst protests and death threats in India.

His Qatari citizenship came with a promise of peace and building on his legacy further. So the second collection of the museum contains works that he made in Doha till his last breath. These include some of the 35 paintings he made from his unfinished series of 99 works on the Arab civilisation. These have never been seen in public before. The Battle of Badr (2008) shows Husain’s famous horses depict the pivotal military victory of 624 AD for the Muslims against the larger Quraysh army of Mecca. Yemen (2008) takes Husain back to his own Arab roots to depict nomadic life and mud houses in the desert. And Zuljanah (2007) is a portrait of the grey Arabian stallion of Imam Hussain celebrated for his role in the Battle of Karbala in 680 AD.

Battle of Badr (2008). Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Noof Mohammad, the curator of the museum, explains, “It will resonate with every visitor that as an artist, you don’t need to confine yourself to one medium. You can excel in many different styles after you test and and work in it. Husain started with calligraphy as a young boy and you see his work expand till his last breath. And he did these combinations of what all he learnt. Like in the ‘Battle of Badr’ (2008) he writes in Arabic which were verses from the Quran that he first learnt in his life as a child. “

The finale of the museum collection is a kinetic installation conceptualised by Husain in 2009, called “Seeroo fi al Ardh”. It’s an Arabic verse which translates to "Walk in the Land”.

Kinetic installation 'Seeroo fi al Ardh'. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Seero Fi Al Ardh. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Seero Fi Al Ardh. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Morano horse from 'Seero Fi Al Ardh'. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

I say it with great pride and equal humility that Husain became my friend in the last and final decade of his life. I met him often to shoot and interview him for my stories. Each conversation was an experience. He was 65 years older than me but one never felt the age gap. In my last recorded interview with him in 2009, I had met him when was on a self-imposed exile in Dubai. It now serves as a research documentary on his life for other journalists. At that time, he was busy reading books on the Arab civilisation and preparing for his new series.

When I had sat with him inside his red Ferrari for a small drive, he started humming a tune and told me that he plans to make this sports car a part of an upcoming work. I laughed it off at that time. A week after my shoot, he was flying to Italy to work on his Morano horses. It feels great that he had shared with me these tiny bits which are now part of ‘Seeroo…’.

The work is placed in a huge circular hall next to the main building. A red mosaic wall of ceramic chips that form a painting of Husain’s famous running horses creates a stunning backdrop for the stage. A sculpture of a winged man cast in Husain’s signature style of human form comes swooping down from above. Husain’s sculptural horses are galloping around the stage in life size, specially created in handblown Murano glass studios in Italy. The horses are in five stunning colours as light reflects through them to create magical shadows. As they run on stage in circular patterns, they disappear under the stage to clear the way for vintage cars which spring up on hydraulic lifts and zoom in the outer circle.

In Husain’s own words when he conceptualised this work, “The entire ensemble is like a performance of dancing horses in crystal glass set to the tune of traditional song of horsemanship, chivalry and strength.” Every aspect of this was left behind by Husain with detailed instructions. He sketched out every movement, every light mood, every musical note, every mould of the glass horses and selected every car for the piece.

An immersive show inside the museum. Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

The Last Supper in Red Desert (2008). Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

Yemen (2008). Courtesy: Qatar Foundation

His creative zenith also came at a time of mental stress and crisis for him when the protests against some of his works were intensifying back home in India. He later apologised if sentiments were hurt and much to his relief, the Supreme Court of India also cleared his name by supporting the argument of artistic freedom. He emphatically told me that wherever he travels in the world, he keeps India and the language of Modern Indian art inside him. After all, it’s an original language that he had created himself!

The museum is a triumph of human spirit, unprecedented posthumous glory and the honour of a promise. Historically, Husain’s art creates a bridge of two ancient, Indian and Arab civilisations. Culturally, it’s the rediscovery of an Indian modern master who joins the league of today’s top contemporary artists of the world!

Sahar Zaman is an author, multimedia journalist, cultural curator and an advocate of the Orange Economy. She has Founded Asia’s first web-channel dedicated to the Arts, called Hunar TV.

This article went live on December first, two thousand twenty five, at forty-five minutes past twelve at noon.

The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments.

Advertisement
Advertisement
tlbr_img1 Series tlbr_img2 Columns tlbr_img3 Multimedia