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Yasmin Hayat

Yasmin Hayat

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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Yasmin Hayat, The Bull & Whale, 2023
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Yasmin Hayat, The Bull & Whale, 2023
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Yasmin Hayat, The Bull & Whale, 2023

Yasmin Hayat

The Bull & Whale, 2023
Genuine hematite, malachite and indigo, watercolour on Nepalese rice paper.
9 x 6.89ins (22.7 x 17.5cm) (artwork size)
12.4 x 10.43ins (31.5 x 26.5cm) (framed size)
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Yasmin Hayat, Ragamala Dancer, 2018
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Yasmin Hayat, Ragamala Dancer, 2018
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 3 ) Yasmin Hayat, Ragamala Dancer, 2018
'In medieval Islamic manuscripts on cosmography, Kuyūthā, pronounced Que-fa (Arabic: كيوثاء,) is the name given to a cosmic bull whose depiction represented land and agriculture. According to these manuscripts, the...
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"In medieval Islamic manuscripts on cosmography, Kuyūthā, pronounced Que-fa (Arabic: كيوثاء,) is the name given to a cosmic bull whose depiction represented land and agriculture. According to these manuscripts, the bull stood on a vast whale that symbolises the sea and its inhabitants. The duo are responsible for the natural phenomena of our world such as the ebbing of the tides, and as they drink the water of the Earth, they counter off rising sea levels. It was believed that as long as Whale & Bull, (Land and Sea) are in balance, we continue to live in harmony on our planet.

Playing with this idea, I created a painting featuring the bull and whale in dialogue. Taking inspiration from classical manuscripts, I used handcrafted Nepalese paper and natural pigments such as hematite and Indigio for this modern interpretation of the story. "
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