Taxila is known for its artisans who are expert stone carvers. — Dawn
Taxila’s sculptors are known across the world but due to different socio-economic reasons this centuries-old art is on the verge of extinction.
As soon as someone thinks about Taxila, images of master craftsmen carving Buddha statues on black stone come to mind.
Long known the world over for its stone sculptured Buddha statue masterpieces, the art of carving black stone with Greek, Indo-Greek and Persian style is on the extinction.
Stone carving in Taxila is an art which goes back to the 2nd century BC, about a 100 years before Alexander the Great conquered the area.
Taxila, the capital of the great Gandhara civilisation, was also known as the ‘city of artisans’ after its craftsmen who produced the rich, glorious and distinct Gandhara art.
All the artists who were producing these masterpieces of Buddha’s statues and other Buddhist artifacts are today have switched their activities to other profitable businesses.
They are producing other items much popular among the masses and art admirers such as tombstones, langris (mortar and pestle), gravestones, flower pots and decorative pieces from hard stone.
The art of stone carving in Pakistan is as ancient as Buddhism itself as this art has been a centuries-old occupation for scores of families in the Taxila Valley. But with the passage of time this art is on the decline due to the persistent economic condition, lack of patronage from the state, lack of tourists and the law which forbids replicas under the 1975 Antiquities Act.
Anyone who produces replicas is sentenced to imprisonment and subject to fines.
According to Prof Dr Mohammad Ashraf Khan, a former director of the Taxila Institute of Asian Civilisation, roots of these carvers can be traced back to ancient Gandhara as they live between two ancient cities today known as Bhir Mound (the first city of Taxila) and Sirkap (the second city).
This area produced expert artisans who inherited the art from their ancestors and were carving black stone into beautiful shapes and replicas of artifacts for decades.
But things changed for the craftsmen after 9/11 as foreign tourists, especially from Buddhist countries, stopped visiting the city due to security situation in the country. The business flourished from the last many centuries and remained at its peak till the 90s and started to decline after 2000 and collapsed post- 9/11.
“In the 90s, foreign artifacts smugglers found the market cheap and smuggled out hundreds and thousands of Buddha statues and other Buddhist sculptures craved and created by the local sculptors.
“When these masterpieces filled spaces in private museums and drawing rooms in European and Buddhist countries, their purchase by smugglers gradually started to decline and the last ray of hope of these stone carvers collapsed after 9/11,” said Rafeeq Butt, who runs a stone cutting machine near Taxila Museum.
Mr Butt, who spent many decades in European countries, described foreign tourists and art lovers as the lifeline of these stone carvers, adding when these tourists turned their back on Pakistan the local stone craving profession died and now some master craftsmen are running hotels, tea shops, buses or have shifted to tomb carving and pottery making.