Calligraphy: A dying art
So much beauty, aesthetics, culture and tradition in the narrow lanes of Pakistan Chowk is hard to imagine, I thought as stepped into Mohammed Iftikhar’s shop. After meeting this calligrapher with over 30 years of experience, I realised that the profession that we choose definitely influences our personality. Mohammed Iftikhar is polite, soft spoken, a thorough gentleman and so much in tune with his profession that it is difficult to imagine him doing anything else.
“I have been interested in calligraphy or khattati since childhood. It took me four to five years of painstaking hard work to learn this art from Hazrat Nafees Shah Sahib who lived in Lahore. Progress was slow and I had to work with great concentration because not only is each alphabet made beautifully but also has to be accurately sized and proportioned.”
With this, he showed me a book that details the exact proportions and formations of the different letters of the Urdu alphabet. For art as beautiful as a haunting melody drifting through quiet woods, there must also be some precious tools. “Previously, pens that were numbered according to the thickness of their nibs used to come from England but they are no longer available. This makes it increasingly difficult for us. The ones with broader nibs (sarkande ka qalam or reed pen) come from Punjab. The ink we use comes from Germany,” he adds softly.
With computers and desktop printing coming in, calligraphists are forced to find new ways of making a living
Calligraphy is a centuries-old art, and is defined as decorative or ornamental handwriting. The word calligraphy is taken from the Greek word ‘kalli’ meaning beautiful and ‘graphia’ meaning ‘to write’. The Quran itself mentions the pen —‘qalam’ and Muslims have deemed calligraphy as the noblest of arts. The dome, ceiling, walls, pillars on both the interior and exterior of a number of shrines, mosques, monuments and buildings based on Muslim architecture have been thus adorned. Calligraphists in the early Islamic period regularly used rectilinear styles to transcribe manuscripts of the Quran. Since calligraphy is ornamental writing, it is present in all languages and extremely popular in the Muslim world.
However, as with the passage of time paper was favoured over barks and animal skin, so with improved technology and the increased use of computers in all professions, the popularity of the calligraphists has decreased.