Excerpt:
...On first meeting Shafique Uddin at his studio in
London's East End, I spent an afternoon leafing through
his works on paper. Their diversity and universality,
whirling energy and sensitive use of colour amazed me.
As time went on, and I handled more pictures, it felt
as if I were somehow near to touching fire. His myriad-brushstroke
works radiate an inner light through many layers of
paint. Even his darker-paletted pictures exude a magical
phosphorescence, a heart-warming illumination -- that
of an artist who is a born visionary.
The second time I saw Uddin, he was painting onto a
large sheet of paper a ground of yellow and green --
countless, exuberantly concentrated brushstrokes making
a background of sun-infused leaves of grass. Less than
an hour later, I saw him applying, in the centre of
the shimmering, now red-flecked field, a few final,
staccato strokes to conjure up the figure of a large
bird. It was extraordinary to have seen this picture
at start and finish, the dynamic urgency of the artist
at work and the consummate subtlety of the completed
picture. It seemed to me that its vibrantly notated
background corresponded exactly to the bird's song.