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| Ana Molka Ahmed – the first woman painter of Pakistan | 
Professor  Ana Molka Ahmed (1917-1994) was among the first few female artists at  the time of independence of Pakistan in 1947. Born as Molly Bridger in  London to a Jewish couple, a Polish mother and a Russian father, she  studied painting, sculpture and design from the famous St. Martin School  of Arts, London, followed by a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Art.  But she was to make her name far from her home in the scorching summer  of the Indo-Pak subcontinent. She converted to Islam at the age of 18 in  1935, before marrying Sheikh Ahmed, a would be Pakistani in October  1939, then studying in London. The couple later came to Lahore in 1940.  Although the marriage broke in 1951, she elected to stay in Pakistan and  continued to stay in Lahore with her two daughters till her death.
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| hree famous paintings of Ana Molka Ahmed: "The day of Resurrection - Qiyamat" (top) - "The Hell (Jhahanum - Hell)" (centre) - "Heaven (Jannat - Heaven)" (bottom) | 
She  was the driving force behind setting up the Fine Arts Department of the  Punjab University, Lahore in 1940. The same institution was to later  become the training ground for the women artists of Pakistan after the  independence. Initially, there were only five or six Muslim students in  the art department, but Anna Molka Ahmed went from one college to other  seeking and convincing students for her arts department. She headed the  department for next three decades (1940-1978). Many of her students,  like Colin David, Abrar Termizi, Ghulam Rasool, Shahnawaz Zaidi and Javed Iqbal became famous artists in the country and many of them are playing their role globally.
She even took evening art classes at Lahore Arts Council (Alhamra) and later in a village near Lahore. Her untiring efforts gradually upgraded art education beyond B.A to M.A. in fine art at the Punjab University.
She even took evening art classes at Lahore Arts Council (Alhamra) and later in a village near Lahore. Her untiring efforts gradually upgraded art education beyond B.A to M.A. in fine art at the Punjab University.
It  is because of trend setters like her that the feminist art in Pakistan  is gaining strength away from traditional gender discriminatory  dominance. In fact these days we are witnessing a gradual dismantling of  social and gender classifications. This has not been easy, since a lot  of women had to struggle hard to bring women atop many a prestigious  position - above men, Ana Molka Ahmed has been one such woman. 
Beside  painting, she was an avid gardener. She would wear her trade mark while  tending the garden, cutting hedges in new and artistic pattern, and  went on painting and gardening till the very last time until she was  ordered by the doctors to stop because it was straining her health  badly. She breathed her last in Lahore on April 21, 1994.
Remembering Ana, Professor Dr. Saadat Saeed Urdu Department Ankara University Turkey writes, “She  used to treat her subjects boldly. Her grand paintings contain sparks  of her domineering and impressive personality. Her impressionistic  technique blended with expressionistic tones and shades made her work  unique. The suggestiveness of her knife was creative. She chose knife to  paint in preference to smooth brushes and made her style so unique that  the audience could do nothing but stand and wonder. The style  originated by her was so unusual in its essence that art critics  declared her work far better than the work done by most of her  contemporary artists. Anna Molka's multi- cultural background made her  viewpoint vast and liberal. Anna  Molka used the media of drawing, painting, graphic arts, sculpture and  design. She was known as an expert in the domain of still life, animal  nature and figures. She used the media of water colour, gouache, fresco,  tempera, oil, wax, mosaic to paint and produce unique portraits, still  life, landscapes, figure compositions and animal paintings. She  loved to paint solitude, loneliness, alienation, mannerism, sufferings  and sadness in the perspective of urban landscape. Most of her paintings  symbolize materialistic life around us. She painted poetry and wrote  sceneries. Her colours were bright and strokes fascinating.” 
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| Ana Molka Ahmed – the first woman painter of Pakistan | 
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| ana molka ahmed | 
Anna  is part of the beginning of art developments in Pakistan. I am, she  said once, "the Mother of all the artists." Recognition of her work is  documented through a number of national awards, which include the  Tamgha-i-Imtiaz, in 1963, the President's Award for the Pride of  Performance in 1969 and also the Khudeja Tul Kubra Medal. A commemorative stamp was also issued a postage stamp in her honour.
Posted By : USMAN AWAN




