siddiqa juma i s l a m i c a rt
siddiqa juma i s l a m i c a rt Guided by the Qur’an and Islamic tradition, Siddiqa Juma creates art that celebrates a rich religious and cultural heritage. Siddiqa has throughout her life been seeking some form of expression for her faith. Starting her career in graphic design, she has gone on to write, illustrate and produce Islamic children’s books and produce a slate of animated series that teach a particularly Muslim morality. It is in painting however where Siddiqa has found the conduit for her devotion. It is not just the content and subject matter of Siddiqa’s work that reveals her beliefs: the processes by which her work is created have as much to tell. Siddiqa’s pieces are characterised by successive layers of vivid colour and intricate repetitive patterns and calligraphy, which draw to mind the ancient illuminated Qur’ans now proudly housed in museums around the world. The vibrancy of her palette is an aesthetic choice that betrays Siddiqa’s unending eagerness to engage with the faith with which she grew up. Siddiqa describes the process of painstakingly covering a canvas with God’s name as her personal tasbih, or incantation. Creating these pieces is an act of devotion in itself, a stand-in for meditation, in which each occurrence of a word is like a small offering to God.
“Siddiqa Juma’s painting in the multi-faith room at Great Ormond Street Hospital has a capacity to reflect the mystery of the spiritual and draws the viewer into a relationship with the image. By using the name of Allah in one of the specific colours, the integrity and depth of the faith are reflected in a way that interacts rather than imposes” Reverend Jim Linthicum, Great Ormond Street Hospital
www.siddiqajuma.co.uk
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The development of Siddiqa’s faith is also evident in the development of her work. As her style has evolved, she has found herself fixated on Hajj, the pilgrimage that every Muslim endeavours to perform at least once in their lifetime. Siddiqa has not yet made this journey herself, and so her work communicates not the experience of pilgrimage or the process of performing the Hajj, but a yearning to embark on that journey, with all the elements on every canvas gravitating irresistibly towards the holy city. This desire has given her work a new focus, moving her away from imitation of classic Islamic art and towards a more personal style, one which communicates all at once the nearness and the distance between Siddiqa and her faith.
Domes on red - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Ripple - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Asma-ul-Husna blue - Acrylic on canvas - 120cm x 100cm
Ayat-ul-Kursi - Acrylic on canvas - 101cm x 76cm
Night - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Journey around the Kaabah - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Asma-ul-Husna - Acrylic on canvas - 120cm x 100cm
Domes - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Kaabah1 - Acrylic on canvas - 80cm x 100cm
Allah swirl - Acrylic on canvas - 120cm x 100cm
Ar-Rahmaan - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Diversity - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Serene - Acrylic on canvas 150cm x 100cm
Circumumbulation - Acrylic on canvas- -150cmcm x 100cm
Shoulder to Shoulder - Acrylic on canvas - 120cm x 76cm
On the crest of a wave - Acrylic on canvas- -150cmcm x 100cm
Pilgrimage - Acrylic on canvas - 80cm x 40cm
Equal - Acrylic on canvas - 150cm x 100cm
In amongst the domes - Acrylic on Canvas - 80cm x 40cm
Mosques on red - String and Nail - 100cm x 100cm
Abstract Domes 1 - Acrylic on canvas - 120cm x 76cm
Kaabah speckle - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm
Dome of Contention - Acrylic on canvas - 121cm x 76cm
Centre of my Reason - Acrylic on canvas - 100cm x 100cm