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Installation view of works by Imran Mir from the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, 2022
Installation view of works by Imran Mir from the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, 2022
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Installation view of Imran Mir's works at MANZAR: Art and Architecture from Pakistan 1940s to Today at the National Museum of Qatar
Installation view of Imran Mir's works at MANZAR: Art and Architecture from Pakistan 1940s to Today at the National Museum of Qatar
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Installation view of works by Imran Mir during the 36th Bienal de São Paulo © Natt Fejfar / Fundação Bienal de São Paulo
Installation view of works by Imran Mir during the 36th Bienal de São Paulo © Natt Fejfar / Fundação Bienal de São Paulo
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Invitation card for Imran's first exhibition in 1972
Invitation card for Imran's first exhibition in 1972
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At his exhibition in 1972 with Bashir Mirza, Nilofur Hussain and Ahmed Parvez
At his exhibition in 1972 with Bashir Mirza, Nilofur Hussain and Ahmed Parvez
Imran Mir
Untitled, 1977
Acrylic on canvas
101.6 x 91.4 cm
40 x 36 in
40 x 36 in
Signed and dated and inscribed on reverse 'Imran, New York, Jan- 1977, 36 x 40'
Further images
The works produced by Imran Mir during the 1970s established a rigorous and highly individual abstract language within Pakistani modernism. While Karachi’s streets presented what Rasheed Araeen described as an...
The works produced by Imran Mir during the 1970s established a rigorous and highly individual abstract language within Pakistani modernism. While Karachi’s streets presented what Rasheed Araeen described as an “unending spectacle” of images, signs, and calligraphy, Mir turned instead toward geometry, colour, and optical movement. In paintings such as this, horizontal bands of muted blues, greys, and browns are punctuated by sharply defined linear accents, creating a restrained yet dynamic visual rhythm. Araeen observed the “absence of iconography” in Mir’s work, suggesting that the artist withdrew from the bombardment of contemporary visual culture in order to preserve “its free creativity.”
Writing on Mir’s exhibitions of the period, Ali Imam described him as a “committed, cerebral painter” whose practice evolved through a continual process of formal experimentation. Through the use of lines, intersecting planes, and flat areas of colour, Mir constructed compositions that generated what Imam termed “unusual visual sensations,” where “both the painting and the viewer are kinetic (mobile).” Subtle shifts in scale and direction create an optical tension that changes as the viewer moves before the canvas, transforming abstraction into an active perceptual experience.
Mir’s years at the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto were equally formative. Supporting himself through illustration work, he exhibited internationally in Toronto, New York, and Los Angeles, and in 1975 became the only foreign student in the college’s history to receive the Governor General’s Trophy for Best Student. Beneath the precision and restraint of these abstractions lies a deeply personal narrative of migration, solitude, and ambition that shaped the work of this defining decade.
In recent years, Mir’s work has received increasing international recognition through major museum and biennial presentations. In 2022, the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam presented his work in the exhibition Sedje Hémon, Imran Mir, Abdias Nascimento: Abstracting Parables, one of the most significant museum presentations of Mir’s work in Europe to date. In 2024–25, his work was included in MANZAR: Art and Architecture from Pakistan 1940s to Today, organised by Qatar Museums and presented at the National Museum of Qatar, an ambitious survey that situated Mir’s abstractions within a wider history of Pakistani modernism and artistic experimentation in South Asia.
Mir’s works have also been selected for the 36th São Paulo Biennale, one of the world’s leading international exhibitions of contemporary art. These recent presentations have positioned Mir within a broader global history of post-war abstraction, underscoring the continuing relevance of his investigations into geometry, perception, and movement while introducing his work to new international audiences.
Writing on Mir’s exhibitions of the period, Ali Imam described him as a “committed, cerebral painter” whose practice evolved through a continual process of formal experimentation. Through the use of lines, intersecting planes, and flat areas of colour, Mir constructed compositions that generated what Imam termed “unusual visual sensations,” where “both the painting and the viewer are kinetic (mobile).” Subtle shifts in scale and direction create an optical tension that changes as the viewer moves before the canvas, transforming abstraction into an active perceptual experience.
Mir’s years at the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto were equally formative. Supporting himself through illustration work, he exhibited internationally in Toronto, New York, and Los Angeles, and in 1975 became the only foreign student in the college’s history to receive the Governor General’s Trophy for Best Student. Beneath the precision and restraint of these abstractions lies a deeply personal narrative of migration, solitude, and ambition that shaped the work of this defining decade.
In recent years, Mir’s work has received increasing international recognition through major museum and biennial presentations. In 2022, the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam presented his work in the exhibition Sedje Hémon, Imran Mir, Abdias Nascimento: Abstracting Parables, one of the most significant museum presentations of Mir’s work in Europe to date. In 2024–25, his work was included in MANZAR: Art and Architecture from Pakistan 1940s to Today, organised by Qatar Museums and presented at the National Museum of Qatar, an ambitious survey that situated Mir’s abstractions within a wider history of Pakistani modernism and artistic experimentation in South Asia.
Mir’s works have also been selected for the 36th São Paulo Biennale, one of the world’s leading international exhibitions of contemporary art. These recent presentations have positioned Mir within a broader global history of post-war abstraction, underscoring the continuing relevance of his investigations into geometry, perception, and movement while introducing his work to new international audiences.