Wonder of the Age

Page 31

Master of the Jainesque Shahnama Active 1425–40, in western India, probably Malwa

A

t every turn, this artist reveals his origins as one trained in the western Indian style so closely identified with Jain and Hindu manuscript painting. That he turned these skills to the illustration of the most famous of all Islamic epic narratives, the Shahnama (Book of Kings) of Firdawsi, was a daring and challenging move. The catalyst must have been a commission from a Muslim patron who, wishing to have an edition of this illustrated epic, sought out an accomplished local artist. The patron with such a keen interest was probably a local Sultanate ruler well versed in Persian literature, who already maintained a library containing imported Iranian illustrated manuscripts. Access to such works would have been essential to provide visual models for the Indian artist unfamiliar with either the imagery or the conventions of Iranian painting. The specific treatment of armored soldiers with their caparisoned horses draws directly on Iranian models, as does the depiction of rocky landscapes, sky-cloud boundaries, and specific icons such as the mythical bird Simurgh. For the more routine pictorial building blocks, the artist reverted to the tradition in which he was trained, as examples show in the stylization of trees and water and use of the Hindu-Jain convention of a red ground, which makes no provision for spatial needs. Most compelling of all are the figures, seen routinely in three-quarter profile, in a manner closely related to the Caurapancasika style.19 This manuscript, in its original condition, was bound as a single codex format volume comprising 350 pages of Persian text, 66 of which are illustrated.20 The artist confined all his paintings to a landscape format, never daring to fill the entire page, betraying his origins as one trained in the illustration of palm-leaf and paper manuscripts in the potli tradition.21 Jain Kalpasutra and Hindu Balagopalastuti manuscripts provide contemporary models (No. 5 and Fig. 4). This remarkable manuscript reflects a broader movement toward integration and cultural accommodation between occupier and occupied across Sultanate India, as foreign Muslim rulers imposed their authority over the Hindu majority. The culturally liberal approach for which the Mughal emperor Akbar (r. 1556–1605) is praised has its roots in the Sultanate era, as is vividly witnessed by these paintings. Unknowingly, this artist set in motion a series of dynamic exchanges between native Indian schools of painting and imported Iranian styles that would have profound consequences on the development of Indian painting in the century that followed.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.