From grease stains to gallery walls: Karachi mechanic’s journey into surrealism

The photo collage shows paintings of a mechanic turned artist Behzad Ahmed Warsi in Karachi, Pakistan on October 13, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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From grease stains to gallery walls: Karachi mechanic’s journey into surrealism

  • Chance encounter with painter Shahid Rassam turned young mechanic’s hidden sketches into beginning of professional art career
  • Once repairing engines, Behzad Ahmed Warsi now paints surreal visions of war and emotion displayed in galleries worldwide

KARACHI: The air inside a Liaquatabad mechanic’s shop on a January evening in 2016 was thick with the smell of oil and gasoline. Amid the clang of wrenches and the growl of engines, a young worker, Behzad Ahmed Warsi, wiped grease from his hands, slipped into a quiet corner, pulled out a scrap of paper and began to draw.

That day, fate rolled in on four wheels. A car broke down near the shop, and behind the wheel was Shahid Rassam, a prominent Pakistani Canadian painter, sculptor and principal of an art school in Karachi. 

While waiting for repairs, Rassam noticed the boy sketching.

“I saw a boy who wiped off oil and then went to sit in a corner, picked up a piece of paper, and started sketching on it,” Rassam recalled.

That fleeting scene, a moment of creativity in the midst of grease and noise, would alter the young mechanic’s life.

Rassam, who had long wanted to help artists from working-class backgrounds, called Warsi over.

“I asked, ‘Do you like drawing pictures?’ and he said, ‘Yes,’” Rassam said. 

“This thought always remained in my heart to do something for those boys and girls who come from this area and from the middle class, who have no opportunity, who can’t even afford to buy a piece of paper or a pencil.”

He invited Warsi to his studio, marking the beginning of a transformative mentorship.

“From the end of 2016 onwards, I started working with him [Rassam],” Warsi, now 32, said. “That was when I saw and understood what professional art is, how it’s developed and what the whole process looks like.”

The only child of his parents, Warsi had been taking odd jobs to support his family. Seeing his determination, Rassam spoke to his parents.

“I spoke to his parents and got him to stop working at the mechanic shop,” Rassam said. “I told them, ‘Whatever little I can do, I will do it, because he has a passion for art.’”

He asked just one thing in return.

“Can you work hard day and night? It’s okay if there are no resources, that’s not a problem, but God has given you talent, and if you work hard, you can achieve a lot,” Rassam told him.

Warsi kept his word. He earned a scholarship at the Arts Council of Pakistan, Karachi, and completed a four-year diploma in 2022 with distinction, becoming a professional artist.

Today, Warsi’s hands are “dirty with colors,” as he puts it, not with oil. His chosen medium is oil paint, and his passion is surrealism.

“In this style, the imagery is realistic, but the paintings are based on symbolic elements,” he said. “The overall effect is dreamlike, it carries the feel of a dream.”

Much of his work explores the psychological and human dimensions of conflict.

“My topic is related to war,” he said. “The [Gaza] war that is going on these days, so in that, I show the shemagh [scarf] in such a way as if it’s very powerful or I show some kind of scenario.”

Animals, often crows, horses, or doves, also appear frequently in his paintings, representing “emotions” or “nations,” alongside fragmented human forms.

“Through drawings as well I am saying something,” he said.

His canvases now hang in exhibitions across Pakistan and abroad.

“I’ve participated in exhibitions held here in Pakistan, in Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, and other cities,” he said. “In fact, some of my paintings have also made their way abroad to countries like Qatar, UAE, Canada, and India.”

Rassam says his student’s rise has been remarkable.

“This shows that a boy who didn’t even have sandals or bus fare, now, by the grace of God, he drives a car, his paintings sell, exhibitions are being held in different cities of Pakistan, and among the rising artists, he is at the very top.”

Now teaching at the Arts Council, Warsi spends long nights in his studio, painting the dreams that once hid behind grease-stained hands.

“If that day I hadn’t met Sir, or if he hadn’t passed by, then at that time, the grease that used to make my hands dirty, today, they wouldn’t be dirty in colors,” he said, smiling.

“Even if my hands still get dirty, they get dirty with colors,” he laughed, “and with those, I am making a painting and working for exhibitions.”


No casualties as blast derails Jaffar Express train in Pakistan’s south

Updated 26 January 2026
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No casualties as blast derails Jaffar Express train in Pakistan’s south

  • Passengers were stranded and railway staffers were clearing the track after blast, official says
  • In March 2025, separatist militants hijacked the same train with hundreds of passengers aboard

QUETTA: A blast hit Jaffar Express and derailed four carriages of the passenger train in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province on Monday, officials said, with no casualties reported.

The blast occurred at the Abad railway station when the Peshawar-bound train was on its way to Sindh’s Sukkur city from Quetta, according to Pakistan Railways’ Quetta Division controller Muhammad Kashif.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bomb attack, but passenger trains have often been targeted by Baloch separatist outfits in the restive Balochistan province that borders Sindh.

“Four bogies of the train were derailed due to the intensity of the explosion,” Kashif told Arab News. “No casualty was reported in the latest attack on passenger train.”

The Jaffar Express stands derailed near Abad Railway Station in Jacobabad following a blast on January 26, 2026. (AN Photo/Saadullah Akhtar)

Another railway employee, who was aboard the train and requested anonymity, said the train was heading toward Sukkur from Jacobabad when they heard the powerful explosion, which derailed power van among four bogies.

“A small piece of the railway track has been destroyed,” he said, adding that passengers were now standing outside the train and railway staffers were busy clearing the track.

In March last year, fighters belonging to the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) separatist group had stormed Jaffar Express with hundreds of passengers on board and took them hostage. The military had rescued them after an hours-long operation that left 33 militants, 23 soldiers, three railway staff and five passengers dead.

The passenger train, which runs between Balochistan’s provincial capital of Quetta and Peshawar in the country’s northwest, had been targeted in at least four bomb attacks last year since the March hijacking, according to an Arab News tally.

The Jaffar Express stands derailed near Abad Railway Station in Jacobabad following a blast on January 26, 2026. (AN Photo/Saadullah Akhtar)

Pakistan Railways says it has beefed up security arrangements for passenger trains in the province and increased the number of paramilitary troops on Jaffar Express since the hijacking in March, but militants have continued to target them in the restive region.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s southwestern province that borders Iran and Afghanistan, is the site of a decades-long insurgency waged by Baloch separatist groups who often attack security forces and foreigners, and kidnap government officials.

The separatists accuse the central government of stealing the region’s resources to fund development elsewhere in the country. The Pakistani government denies the allegations and says it is working for the uplift of local communities in Balochistan.