Miniature art: Made in Lahore
Graced as the capital of the great Mughal Empire by Emperor Akbar, Lahore became the nucleus of royal, creative activities as well as imperial architecture of the time. These grand traditions still find resonance in modern-day Pakistan: from the jewel in the Mughals’ crown, Lahore also became the hub of neo-miniature tradition in modern-day Pakistan.
It is in Lahore and its famed National College of Arts (NCA) that an indigenous identity of miniature art was made. But much like the tradition of miniature art, this indigenous identity too has evolved and absorbed many historical influences to become what it is today.
During the Sikh and British periods, for example, Western art and architecture styles helped in evolving a new aesthetic canon. The miniature tradition, which had already embraced the Mughal style, absorbed the secular dogma of the Bengal school with matchless skills of A. R. Chughtai before and after Partition in 1947.
In modern-day Pakistan, the city adored by Mughal emperors carried forward grand traditions in miniature art
However, the traditional court-style miniature painting crept into this city along with Ustad Haji Sharif, the court painter of the Maharaja of Patiala, and Ustad Shuja Ullah. Both these masters joined the Mayo School of Arts, now the NCA, to earn a living. Their presence ensured that an imperial style of miniature painting reserved a place in the academic arts of Lahore.
Ustad Bashir Ahmad at the NCA and Khalid Saeed Butt at the fine arts department of the Punjab University were involved in teaching and practising this art at the time.
Bashir Ahmad was a direct disciple of Ustad Haji Sharif and Ustad Aftab Ahmad Khan. He learnt all traditions that allowed him to later on replace Ustad Shuja Ullah, after his retirement in 1977 from the NCA.
This further pushed him to contribute in establishing a miniature art department at the NCA in 1982. This juncture of time is considered as the revolutionising point for the contemporary miniature painting, which took the art world by storm, not only in Pakistan but also on the international level.