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Saturday, 20 June 2015

India’s Earliest Photographs- Gate of MJamuasjid Mosque 1860.






Gate of Jamu Masjid Mosque. Lahore, India. 1860.


In “Three Princes With Attendants,” three young Central Indian princes, perhaps from Gwalior, pose with two attendants, with the youth on the very right blurred by the long exposure. According to Ms. Hutton, “The lavishness of the studio setting speaks to the success that Dayal had achieved by that point in time.”
Other images in the exhibition include prints by a handful of photographers and amateurs who worked in India during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, not long after the East India Company replaced the Mughals as the main power in the north and when rule was subsequently given to the queen of England. These men, some of whom were doctors, took quickly to photography, which was rapidly replacing painting as the primary tool for portraiture and documentation, not long after its invention in Europe.

“The majority of South Asia scholars focus on ancient Indian sculpture and painting, but India’s traditions of modern art are becoming new grist for study and are of greater interest to the large collecting and museum-going public,” said Marika Sardar, associate curator of Southern Asian and Islamic art at the San Diego Museum of Art. “In that way, people are looking more at the practice of photography and its importance in the changing world of 19th-century India.”

For one, photographers at the time were encouraged by each other and by the British raj. And not only was there widespread promotion of the new tools of the trade — daguerreotype cameras were advertised in Calcutta a year after their invention in France — but photographic societies in Bombay, Calcutta and Madras were beginning to pop up from the 1850s onward.

And, according to the Bubbar catalog, “With these societies developed communities that organized events, exhibitions and the publication of journals, fostering an active culture of experimentation and exchange.”
The exhibition includes works by members of those societies, like Dr. John Murray, a teacher and principal of the medical school in Agra, who took up photography around 1849 and began participating in the Photographic Society of Bengal in 1856. At that time, the colonial administration began employing photographers to conduct surveys to document and preserve India’s monuments as well as military sites, specifically after the uprising of 1857. It was with this intention, perhaps, that Dr. Murray was asked by Governor-General Lord Canning to photograph myriad locations related to that uprising, as in an 1858 image of cannonballs in front of the Pearl mosque in Agra.

Similarly, in 1863, John and James Nicholas, who together were known as the Nicholas Brothers, Photographers of Madras, established a studio and concentrated on the South Indian landscape. They produced such works as, “Madura, No. 6. A Passage in the Temple” and “Seringapatam. Mausoleum Erected Over Tippoo Sultan and Haider Ali.” The latter, according to the Bubbar catalog, is an example of a site that interested the British.

One gem in the show, Mr. Bubbar said, is the later Man Ray portrait of Yashwant Rao II Holkar Bahadur, maharajah of Indore.

“He was a gifted and highly sensitive Indian prince, not merely one following the latest fashion,” Mr. Bubbar said. “Man Ray photographed him and his wife on numerous occasions. The image marks a high point of exchange, a cultural encounter.”

Mr. Bubbar, who added that he had been working on curating this show “subconsciously for at least five years,” hopes that with his exhibition he can shed light on an important chapter of Indian history and art.
“The show is a survey of the photographic medium in India from 1855 to 1930, highlighting some key moments,” he said. “I am hoping that people walk away with a sense of the medium’s history, its beauty and its relevance.”

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