Sughra Rababi (1922 – 1994) was an artist from Pakistan. As a young female artist in the 1940s, she was the first woman to win the All India Painting Competition Award. A versatile painter, designer and sculptor – Rababi was truly a woman far ahead of her times.
Rababi donated most of the proceeds from sales of her art to support humanitarian causes. In recognition and memory of her artistic and charitable contributions, UNICEF created a Sughra Rababi Fund and the Mayor of San Francisco declared 19 January 1994, as Sughra Rababi Day in San Francisco.
Rababi, an accomplished Pakistani painter, did her graduate studies at the Saranagati School of Art in Karachi and her post-graduate studies at the Shantiniketan Fine Arts University in Bengal, India. Her art career spanned more than five decades and she exhibited her works in solo and group exhibitions throughout her life. Her last solo exhibition was held in 1992 in San Francisco, California. Rababi’s art was original and her style, versatile and truly her own. She was a prolific artist and created landscapes, figurative and calligraphic paintings and used tempera, oil and acrylic as her mediums. Rababi was also a designer and a sculptor.
Posthumous reproductions of her art are sold to support humanitarian causes.[1][2][3][4][5]
References
1. ‘Art for a Cause’ by Professor Karrar Hussain in ‘The News’. 1994.
2. ‘Smoldering Shades of Passion’ by Marjorie Hussain in ‘The Dawn’. 1994.
3. ‘Spirit of Sughra Rababi’ by Salwat Ali in ‘The Dawn’. 2005.
4. ‘Sughra Rababi’ by David Douglas Duncan in ‘The World of Allah’. 1982. Publisher Houghton Mifflin, ISBN 0395325048, 9780395325049
5. ‘Sughra Rababi Day in San Francisco’. 19 January 1994. The Mayor of San Francisco’s Office.