A western nari in the eastern world.
Belinda Eaton grew up in Kenya and Spain and was educated at St. Martins
School of Art, London, specializing in printmaking and etching. When
she arrived in Karachi in 1995, she was like Alice in Wonderland in
a land where men dye their beards in blazing red; carry decorated pigtails
tied to their vehicles as a momento of their sweethearts living hundreds
of miles away in tribal areas; where dancing girls please men and men
throw rupees, even dollars on them and women sell papayas on the street.
“Magic Realism” is not just a literary term, but a hard
fact. Her mysterious symbols which she coined and experienced while
in Kenya, could be met and seen right here in the streets of Karachi.
The exhibition of her “magical” paintings opened here recently
at the A.N. Gallery, Coconut Grove. Belinda has exhibited her work in
London, New York, Spain and now in Karachi. Her recent interests include
textile design and growing herbs and their scientific plantation. Her
obsession with textile design and her search for oriental patterns has
enabled her to discover a colourful spectrum and has given her a sense
of colour juxtaposition. Like textile designs, her images are big and
precise, imbued with a generous palette. Here exotic motifs have been
exploited with dramatic effects. Belinda’s colour arrangements
change with the slightest touch of a kaleidoscope and her perspective
expands and compresses like the bellows of an accordion.
The dazzling light in her paintings highlight the decorative elements
of Pakistani culture. Perhaps she is searching for a contact point via
cultural moorings. The faces in her work show a kind of frankness, a
sublimation, stemming from the honest and sincere approach towards life
and human relationship. Belinda’s faith in humanity is genuine
and vast, like a Dickensian gallery of portraits – Pakistani characters
moving to complete a world of exuberance. The human comedy completes
its circle in her canvases – men, women, bullfighter, rickshaw
driver, dancer, shoe-seller, matador, fish, lizard, turtle, strawberries,
papaya and Cadillac, all are there to celebrate their existence.
Her interest in the cultural life of Karachi, and in the local people
who orchestrate it, is amazing indeed. In our art circles where figurative
art, in particular portrait studies seems to be losing its value as
a genre, Belinda’s studies are excellent. These portraits are
sociological documents in a way, and could revive fresh interest in
this art form. These portraits, contact points for Belinda, have been
translated in visual terms with sympathy and feeling, exemplifying her
passion for the eastern way of living. Her figures are in an emotive
state of frankness. They are not complex-ridden and are open-hearted,
keen to establish a dialogue. She extends her welcome with a sense of
human fraternity and meets them halfway without any reservation. She
is a foreigner without any complexes.
Her colours are luminescent and compete for supremacy in decorative
compositions. She is especially fond of rich and pure colours which
attract onlookers like jewels. This is not a work of cerebral brooding
or pessimistic foreboding , it’s a world of vitality. Belinda
Eaton is a painter of urban reality and freely uses visual metaphors
of urban living. As she grew up in Kenya and Spain, she is not afraid
of irrationality and can accept the illogicality of the situation as
a natural norm. She is not scared of the unknown and relies more on
faith than attempting to find an explanation. There is a lot of the
East in her metabolism. She has all the cloning possibilities of being
an eastern nari (damsel).