Thursday, February 28, 2008

Akbar--real begetter of Mughal Paintings



During Akbar’s, real begetter of Mughal paintings, under his personal supervision great tradition of Mughal paintings developed and carried on for at least hundred years when Aurangzeb deposed his father Shah Jahan in 1658. Aurangzeb was orthodox and did not patronize his predecessor’s paintings. Mughal dynasty declined after Aurangzeb and then the royal artists and atelier did not receive royal patronage. Till the end of Mughal dynasty in 1857, miniatures were produced but inferior in quality to those produced in Akbar to Shah Jahan’s period. Akbar founded Imperial studio, headed by Mir Sayyed Ali and Khawaja Abdus Samad who trained the court painters. Though Akbar was illiterate but India experienced the extraordinary transformation of art during his reign. The greatest and finest project was copying and illustration of romance. In his studio he employed large number of painters, calligraphers, gilders, paper makers, and colour grinders etc. who were engaged in production of number of illustrated manuscripts. Both the prominent painters played active part in the administration of the studio and seeing that the work was satisfactory and completed on time. They adopted collective approach, that to a single work only two or three artists they assigned. The experienced painters were responsible for composition, drawing and portraiture and younger artists assisted them. He was unorthodox and used to invite philosophers and leaders for discussions and debates from various religions. By blending various cultural values, traditions and religions he as a head created new religion named “Tauhid-e-Illahi”. The same approach he applied to the art and created unique style by blending Persian, Chinese, European and Indian tradition. That’s why the figural scenes, trees, grass, animals are realistic and borders were decorated with flora and fauna, birds etc. to provide quality to these paintings. The most remarkable thing in paintings during his reign was that mostly male courtiers were painted because females were not allowed in open courts. Primary colours are rare, figures are highly modeled and convey distance and the painters had been trained in the Northern Europe . The paintings at his court were so rich, diverse and demands special consideration. His portraits are in profile or half-profile, sometimes stiff. His painters learned their use of colours from European paintings. At his death in 1605 his library was estimated at 24,000 volumes, with a total of 6, 500, 000 rupees.

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