Pakistan Art,Artists and culture

In 1947 Lahore boasted of two art institutions and an artists community. Karachi had very little post-Partition art activity, which expanded and became enriched by the arrival of pioneering talent people from all over the sub-continent.
Why these days we are adopting other's culture and forgeting our culture values and relationships..????

INFLUENCE..!!!!

Pakistan Culture is basically a mixed culture.Majority of people in Pakistan  are muslims by faith and by birth but they are greatly influence by the hindu culture...as we can see all this in present in wedding ceremonies festivals like BASANT..!!!!!
Pakistan culture are scarttered day by day away from Pakistan and people of Pakistan is having unwanted things in our culture which donot have any concern with culture our ancestors have potted for us..!!!!

MINAR E PAKISTAN...!!!!

Minar-e-Pakistan  is a tall monumental minaret in Iqbal Park Lahore, built in commemoration of the Lahore Resolution. The minaret reflects a blend of Mughal and modern architecture, and is constructed on the site where on March 23, 1940, seven years before the formation of Pakistan, the Muslim League passed the Pakistan Resolution demanding the creation of Pakistan. This was the first official declaration to establish a separate homeland for the Muslims living in the Indian Subcontinent. Interestingly, the site is also where Nehru and the Indian National Congress declared Indian independence from Britain in 1929.

Pakistan's Culture..!!!

The Badshahi Mosque  or the 'Royal Mosque' in Lahore, commissioned by the sixth Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb in 1671 and completed in 1673, is the second largest mosque in Pakistan and South Asia and the fifth largest mosque in the world. Epitomising the beauty, passion and grandeur of the Mughal era, it is Lahore's most famous landmark and a major tourist attraction.
 

DEMOGRAGHY..!!!!

The population of Pakistan is estimated to be 135 million. An estimated 40 million live in urban areas, with the balance in rural areas. In addition to the residents of the major cities of Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, and Peshawar, which is the city at the edge of the Khyber Pass gateway, a number of tribal residents live in valleys. These include Chitral Valley, at an elevation of 3,800 feet (1,158 meters), where the majority of the people are Muslims but that also is home to the Fakir-Kala sh (wearers of the black robe), a primitive pagan tribe. In Swat Valley, which was once the cradle of Buddhism, Muslim conquerors fought battles and residents claim to be descendants of soldiers of Alexander the Great. In the Hunza Valley, people are noted
Pakistan

Pakistan for longevity, which they claim is because of diet and way of life. The people of Hunza Valley are Muslims and also are believed to be descendants of soldiers of Alexander the Great. In North-West Frontier Province is Kaghan Valley, which is bounded on the west by Swat Valley, on the north by Gilgit, and on the east by Azad Kashmir. The people of Kaghan Valley are Muslim-Pathans as well as Kohistanis and Gujars. Shardu Valley is the capital of the district of Baltistan and is known as "Little Tibet" because the lifestyle there is similar to that in Tibet itself. The people of each of these valley areas are well known for their tribal cultures, handicrafts, and for fascinating clothing, most of which is woven and handmade there and unique to their particular area.