EXHIBITION: A CONTEMPORARY AWAKENING
When the British opened the Mayo School of Arts (now National College of Arts) in Lahore and the Bombay Arts Society a decade apart, in the 1870s, they tacitly undertook the task to point Indian art westward. As a result, some of the greatest traditional art forms of Indian history suffered, some even disappeared. Of those traditions, miniature painting — a form that first bloomed during the Mughal era — particularly paid the price. Today, other than the craftsmen reproducing or basically copying originals, there are only a handful of contemporary artists working with the form in various corners in India. Teetering on the margins of modern art, it is perhaps providence, then, that an exhibition titled Hashiya: The Margin, interprets the border or the margin in miniatures in different ways.
Titled after the Persian word hashiya meaning ‘a margin’, the exhibition began as a project more than a year ago. Mamta Singhania of Anant Art and curator of the exhibition, asked 10 miniaturists to interpret and respond to the idea of the margin becoming the centre. The tradition of painting the border, sort of like a visual enclosure for a central piece, originated in Persian miniatures itself. Through the Mughal era, the miniature evolved into many things, from capturing live action to becoming a document of wildlife. The same can be said of the Pahari miniatures that originated in the north, and are perhaps the last of the original traditions. Both, though, carried the Persian practice of drawing the border.
The margin in miniatures, be it the original Persian, Mughal or Pahari, has largely served a decorative purpose. Painted in floral patterns and evocative colours, the border alludes only to the centrepiece and conditions our idea of it. Singhania’s intention when she began the project was to invert the relation all together. Make the margin the centre. A year on, the concept has morphed into a mapping of borders literal and inaccurate, as well as personal and political.
An exhibition places the margins of miniature at the centre to give the genre an impetus to grow in India
On the political side, British-born artist Dezmond Lazaro and Pakistani artist Yasir Waqas draw intriguing perspectives. Lazaro imagines a boundary-less map of the world — a near utopian idea, a mere three centuries after the nation state came into existence. Lazaro, who in the traditionalist sense manufactures all of his own material, posits a world without division, his execution minimal and extremely subtle.