09 - Chapter 2 PDF
09 - Chapter 2 PDF
09 - Chapter 2 PDF
Chapter I
3 Ibid., pp.228-238. Partita Mitter, “Status and patronage of artists during British rule in India,” Barbara
Stoler Miller, ed Powers ofArt Patronage in Indian Culture, Oxford, 1992, pp.281-282.
*Tapati Guha-Thakurta, The Making ofa New Indian Art, p.36.
5 Partha Mitter, Much Maligned Monsters, pp.249-251 & 228-38.
6 The Illustrated Catalogue of the Great Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations, London, 1851,
pp.378-458. Tapati Guha -Thakurta, Monuments, Objects, Histories, p.49.
41
7 Sudhangsfci Kumar Ray, The Folk Art ofIndia, Yogalayam, Calcutta, 1967, p.3.
* Emulating Western taste Indian elites displayed family portraits and memorabilia of European art
objects in palace-galleries, as could be seen at die Mullick family collection at Marble Palace and the
Tagore family collection at Pathuriaghata. Partha Mltter, Art and Nationalism in Colonial India: 1850-
1922, pp.23-24.
9 Partha Mitter, “Status and Patronage of Artists,”op.ciL, pp.279-80.
10 Ibid., p.183.
42
11 James Mill, The History of British India, London, 1817, G.C.M Birdwood, The Industrial Arts of
India, pp. 131-4.Discussed in Ratnabali Chatterjee, From the Karkhana to the Studio, p.76.
12 G.C.M.Birdwood, pp3 3,131 -2.Partha Mitler, Much Maligned Monsters, pp.176-77.
13 Ibid.,pp.133-4; Partha Mitter, Ibid-, pp.233-235.
14 Partha Mitler, “Status and Patronage of Artists,”op.cit, p.284.
43
15 The Educational Despatch of 1854, Papers Relating to Maintenance of Schools of Art in India as
State Institutions 1893-96; 1898, p.l.
I6Tapati Guha -Thakurta, The Making of a New Indian Art, p.59.J.C.Bagal, History of the Government
College of Art and Craft, Government College of Art Centenary Volume, 1864-1964, Calcutta,
1966,p.1-2.
17 Alexander Hunter, Correspondence on the subject ofthe extension ofArt Education in (Efferent parts
ofIndia, 1867, p.l.
1 Tapati Guha -Thakurta, The Making ofa New Indian Art, p.69.
44
19 H.HXocke, [Principal of the Calcutta School of Art], Memorandum on Art and Industrial Education
in Bengal. BGP/ E, August 1870, No. 45, pp.57-58.
20 Tapati Guha-Thakurta, The Making ofa New Indian Art, p. 69 .
21 J.CJBagal, History, pp.1-5. \hidL.,p -6o .
22 Sir Alfred Croft, Review [First] ofEducation in India in 1886, with Special Reference to the Report
ofEducation Commission, 1886. Extract from the Proceedings of the Government of India in the Home
Dept, Education under date Simla 18th June 1888, Calcutta, Superintendent of Govt Printing, India,
1888, p.261. Papers relating to Maintenance ofSchools ofArt in India [1893-96], 1898, p.17.
45
26 Proceedings of the Madras Central Committee in Connection with the Great Exhibition of Works of
Industry and Art held at Madras in the College Hall, 17th June, 1854, p.l.
27 Report on the Jubbulpore Exhibition ofArts, Manufactures and Produce, Nagpore, December 1866,
Chief Commisionex’s Office Central Provinces, 1867, p. 15.
24 B.H Baden Powell, Handbook ofthe Manufactures and Arts of the Punjab with a Combined Glossary
and Index of Vernacular Trades and Technical Terms forming Vol 2 to the Handbook of the Economic
Products ofthe Punjab, Punjab Printing Company, Lahore, 1872, p.l.
47
29 Selection of Papers Regarding the Exhibition of Products and Manufactures held at Nagpore,
Nagpore Government Press, Nagpore, 1866, pp. 8-21.
30 Ibid, p. 9
31 Ibid, p.27.
32 Ibid., pp. 26,76.
33 Ibid, pp.20-22 For example, one such centre for craft production was ‘Thugee Institute’ at
Jubbulpore.
Fig. 13 Floor plan of Jubbulpur Exhibition, 1866, showing the lay out of the
‘fine arts’ court encircled by pavilions of raw material and manufactures.
From Report on the Jubhulpore Exhibition of Arts, Manufactures and Produce.
48
M Ibid., p.9.
35 Ibid., p.78.
36 Ibid., pp.25-26.
37 Report on the Jubbulpore Exhibition, 1866, pp.15-17. Alexander Hunter, Correspondences, p.4.
38 64 Report of H M's Commissioners for the exhibition of 1851 on the occasion of the inauguration of
a series of Annual International exhibitions, May 1871. Government of India Proceedings of the Dept
ofAgriculture, Revenue and Commerce, July, 1871. CHOC, London.
49
39 The Bengal collection consisted of Pumeah bidriware, Dacca muslin and ivory work among crafts,
and Locke, Principal of Calcutta art school sent an entire collection of casts and a series of drawings of
the Bhubaneswar temples made by the students in 1868-69. Circular dated 15th October, 1870
[Proceedings of Bengal Committee in the MoftussB], Letter No 69, Fort William, 4* April 1871 from
H.S. Beadon to the Hony Secretary to the Central Committee in India for the International Exhibition
of 1871. Ibid.
40HJ.S. Cotton, Letter [No.462] to the Govt of India, Dept of Revenue, Agriculture & Commerce, the
LtGovernor’s views on Dr Forbes Watson's Scheme for an Industrial Survey of India dt 26* Jan 1875.
Procs. of the General Dept [Financial] for the month of Feb 1876, Branch Statistics, Head No-3-
Miscellaneous, Col 1-1, Procs No- 17, p.213. WBSA.
41 Ibid.
Fig 14 ° '' erview o f the Calcutta International.Exhibition o f 1883-4
From Report o f the C a lcu tta International Exhibition o f 1883-4
50
42 Col S.T.Trevor, “Report of the Proceedings of the Executive Committee,” Official Report of the
Calcutta InternationaI Exhibition 1883-4, Vol-1, Part-1, Bengal Secretariat Press, Calcutta, 1885, p.l
43 Ibid., p.ll.
Fig 1 5. Map of the layout of the Calcutta International Exhibition 1883-4
From Report of the Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883-4.
51
44 IbicLThe exhibition stretching over a ground of seven acres, occupied the site of the Indian Museum,
the adjoining Art gallery, three rows of temporary sheds south of the Museum, and a large part of the
maidan ground on the opposite side connected by an over-bridge.
45Ibid. The provinces vrae Jeypore, Rajputana, North Western Province, Oudh, Punjab, Hyderabad,
Mysore, Madras, Bombay, Central India, Burma, Assam, and Central Provinces.
Fig.16. View of South Australian Court of Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883-4
‘6 Ibid., pp.27-36.
47 Ibid., p.4.
Fig. 17. View of Victoria Court of Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883-4
Courtesy: CCA, Montreal.
Fig.18.View of Tasmania Court of Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883-4
Courtesy: CCA, Montreal.
Fig. 19 Gold Medals awarded at the Calcutta International Exhibition.
From Report of the Calcutta International Exhibition of 188S- -
53
and progress combined with the imperial grandeur, through the display
of the arts and manufactures of India.
48 Ibid., pp.51-76. EB.Havell’s Handlist ofthe European Paintings in the Calcutta Art Gallery,
BGP/E, May 1904, Nos. B 39-42.
49 Official Report of the Calcutta International Exhibition, pp. 112-114.
50 Ibid.
Fig.20 Silver Medals awarded for the second-best exhibits at the Calcutta
International Exhibition, 1883-4.
From Report of the Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883-4.
Fig 22 View of Bombay Court of Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883-4.
51 Ibid, pp.119-120.
52 Ibid., pp.96-99.
53 Ibid., pp.93,32.
S*£LL CAAYIRS DACCA
fIBCt MOWN
instruments were all seen as Tine art’ exhibits, that was later absorbed
into the permanent art collection of Indian Museum.54 The popular
local craft of the Bengal province included the traditional hand woven
silk and cotton textiles particularly the finest variety of Dacca Muslin.
that survived the unequal competition from Manchester mills.55 The
delicacy and splendour of jewellery and jewelled arms, fabricated of
the richest and rarest materials, attested to the fine variety of gold and
silver enamelling industry of Calcutta,56 while the gold and the silver
filigree work of Dacca was surpassed by a rapid adaptation to chains
and teapots of European use and designs.57 Also on show were shell
bracelets worn by Bengali women symbolizing Hindu marriage which
demonstrated the popularity of traditional makarmukho design along
with those of European patterns.58[Fig.23] Another unique genre of
Bengal crafts were the Krishnanagar clay miniatures of fruits and
figures of animals and realistic life size clay models made by Motilal
Pal and Jadunath Pal for the exhibition. Those figures, Locke observed
were infused with "life and expression” and had “pieces of real fabric”
as accessories, unlike those made by the Lucknow clay modellers.59
Other local Bengal crafts of ritualistic and domestic use such as
decorative copperware, bell metal ware, basket ware and the simpler
household brassware and pottery were all dumped unceremoniously on
53 Ibid, pp.93,32.
54 Ibid
55 G.C.M.Birdwood, The Industrial Arts ofIndia, Pt-2, p.275. The silk fabrics representing a repository
of traditional patterns were variously described as the Mazchar or ripples of silver, or Bulbulchasm
nightingale's eyes. G. Watts & P. Brown, ‘Official Catalogue of the Indian Art Exhibition, Delhi 1902-
3’, Arts and Crafts of India - A Descriptive Study, Indian Art Collection vol-17, Cosmo Publications,
New Delhi, 1988, p.384. T.N. Mukheijee, Art Manufactures of India, New Delhi, 1974, Rpt 1988,
pp.317-346.
<%id,pp.l35 &159. J.Browne, Descriptive Catalogue, pp. 186-218,.The originality of the traditional
gold ornaments displayed in an ensemble of Tabiz. Cheek. Baiu produced by the Calcutta jewelers. The
traditional gold and silver jewellery had their imitation in brass and bell metal like Hansuli. or Kharu
perpetuated among the low caste village and tribal women. Ibid, pp. 143 -147.
” J.Browne, Descriptive Catalogue, pp.206. The best examples of surviving silverware of traditional
design included a betel box with a pendant, a scent holder, a rosewater sprinkler or a pagoda pattern
hookahbati.
58 H.H.Risley, The Tribes and Castes ofBengal, Vol.2, Calcutta, 1891, pp-221-222.
59 T.N.Mukheijee, pp.59-71. This Krishnanagar tradition had developed from the potters’ craft of
making earthen vessels to spectacular, lifelike images of deities to meet the new social needs of public
display. B.Ghosh, Traditional Arts and Crafts ofBengal:A Sociological Study, Papyrus, Calcutta, 1981,
pp.47-49.
Fig.24. The Rajputana Court at the Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883
60 T.N. Mukheijee, Art Manufactures, pp.62, 223-224, 186, 191-192, 73. These included the
sacrificial sword, knives, fishhooks, betelnut cutters, day dolls, lac toys for votive offerings to local
and rural deities.
61 Official Report ofthe Calcutta International Exhibition of 1883-84, Vol-1, passim.
62 Ibid., pp.303-4.
63 Ibid., p.247.
Fig.25. View of Assam & JaipurCourt of Calcutta International Exhibition, 1883-4.
Courtesy:CCA, Montreal.
Fig .26 View of Madras Court of Calcutta Internation Exhibition, 1883-4.
Pniirfpev A MnTltTP.fll
V/ V/Ul IVOJ . ^5 nxv/ii v» - —‘ •
Fig.27 View of North-West Province Court of Calcutta International Exhibition, 1883-4.
Courtesy:CCA, Montreal.
57
64 Ibid, pp.226-246. For example, there were models and drawings of bridges, railways, collieries, and
the town of Calcutta. The Military Department exhibited articles for field survey by the Ichapore
Powder Factory, Cossipore Shell Factory, Fort William arsenal and saddlery factory. Handicrafts in
coir, cotton and wooden furniture of Western style, produced in the jails and reformatory schools, were
instances of craft teaching to help the underprivileged The survey department displayed advanced
techniques of reproducing maps and tidal diagrams.
58
65 Hon H.J.Reynolds speech, Official Report of the Calcutta International Exhibition 1883-84,1, p.18.
66 Ibid., p. II. ’
67 Ibid., p21.
Fig.28 Example of metal engraving - brass tray from Benaras.
From Technical Art Series, 1902.
59
68 Ibid, p.185.
60
69 Ibid., pp-15,23-26.
70 Ibid.p.22-6. ________________________________
71 W.W. Hunter, The Annals of Rural Bengal, Smith Elder and Co, London, 1883.
11 H.H. Risley, The Tribes and Castes ofBengal, pp.419-420; T.N. Mukherjee, Art Manufactures,
p.196.
3 H.H Risley, The Tribes and Castes ofBengal, VoI-2, pp.60-61.
61
79 Dr.N. Wallich was a Danish Botanist who became the Superintendent of the Botanical Garden at
Sibpur.
80 N.Annandale, sd. The Indian Museum 1814 -1914, Centenary Volume, Indian Museum, Calcutta,
1914, Rpt 2004, edited by Shyamalkanti Chakravarty, pJ2.
81 Ram Comul Sen, “A short Account of the Charak Puia Ceremonies, and a Description of the
Implements Used,” 1829, Journal of The Asiatic Society, No-24, December 1833, pp.610-613.
64
82 Annual Repcrt of the Superintendent and Minutes of the Trustees of the Indian Museum for 1883-84,
Superintendent Govt Printing, Calcutta, 1884, p.l. S.Chakravarty, The Indian Museum, p.8.
83 Ibid, p.9.H.T Prinsep, ‘The Economic Museum Calcutta,’ 1880. In 1878 it occupied 4 halls to store
the jail manufactures and the products of Burma In 1879.
84 Annual Report ofthe Trustees cf the Indian Museumfor 1882-3, p. 11.
85 A.K. Bhaltacharya, “Indian Museum,” Marg, 19, Bombay, December 1965, p.21
65
of the principal races and tribes inhabiting the different parts of India
and more particularly, of Bengal and Assam, their ways of living and
indigenous arts or manufacturers.” After Alexander Pedler and
T.N.Mukherjee, E.Thurston, appointed in charge of the Ethnology
Gallery rearranged it in a way to show the habits and civilization of the
people in various parts of India that formed “an excellent nucleus
collection, capable of very considerable expansion.”90
science and art on the model of South Kensington, London, where the
museum and art school would work together in a comprehensive project
of technical and art education. The museum was to function as a close
adjunct cf the schools of art to spread British education in India — "in
storing up the best examples of Oriental design and processes in
instructing the working artisan in these and in restraining them against
the facile imitation of European designs and methods." Museums were
to stand as "a register of progress and improvement as well as a
repertoire of traditional forms and designs."92 It was in this selected
domain of the decorative arts that the museum evolved, both as a store
house of tradition and as forum of visual instruction, and came to be
entrenched within an extensive institutional network of conserving and
documenting India's art manufactures.
5. Craft teaching under the early Principals in the Calcutta Art School
91 Annual Report of the Trustees ofIndian Museum 1903-4, p.3. I.H.Burkill, Annual Report ofthe
Indian Museum, 1909-10, pp.17-21.
92 “Resolution of the Govtof India and Draft Scheme regarding Museums, Exhibitions and Art
Journal,” January 14,1883, Journal of Indian Art and Industry, 1, Nol, January, 1884, pp.3-4. See T.
Guha -Thakurta, “The Museum in the Colony : Conserving, Collecting, Classifying,” op.cit,p.50.
93 Partha Mitter, “Status and Patronage of Artists,” op.cit,p.285.
68
97 Curriculum of the School of Industrial Art, Calcutta, BGP/E, August 1870, No. 45, p.58.
W.H.Jobbins, “Appendix to the Review of the Government School of Art, Calcutta, 1887-1894,”
Papers Relating to...Schools ofArt in India 1893-1896, pp.91-93.
98 Letter from Rajendralal Mitra to the School of Art, Calcutta, 26th March, 1870, BGP/E, March 1870,
Nos 76-77, pp.51-52.
99 Reportfor the School ofArt, Calcutta, 1865-66, D.P.I., Bengal reproduced in J.CJBagal, History, p.6.
100 W.H Jobbins, Course of Instruction for the Government School of Art, Calcutta 1894 in Papers
relating to ... Schools ofArt in India, pp. 91-94.
Fig.3 1. Ambika Behari Mukherjee, “Portrait,” [water-colour, 18781-
Example of classroom work of portrait painting and human figure
drawing. From the collection of Government College of Art, Calcutta.
Courtesy:CSSSC Archives.
70
illusion of natural forms, new mediums such as water colour and oil
were introduced in elementary classes, and Western style precision was
drilled into still life studies of flowers, fruit and foliage. Locke also
introduced classes in human figure drawing, that was a departure from
the official policy — seen as a part of a ‘fine art’ curriculum and
considered unsuitable for artisans, he however, considered it essential
for the training of artists.101 [Fig.31, 32]
105 Report for the School ofArt, Calcutta, 1872-73, DPI, Bengal, reproduced in A.P. Bagchi, Armada
Jibanl, Calcutta, 1907, pp.l9-24_Only 6 out of 94 students were from the lower classes.
106 J.C. BagaL, History, p.7. ,
107 Minutes by the Lt Governor of Bengal, Richard Temple, Report on the Establishment of an Art
Gallery in Connection with the School of Art at Calcutta, 15* February 1876, Procs of the General
Dept [Education] for the month of February 1876, p.149. WBSA.
108 Reportfor the School ofArt, Calcutta, 1877-78, p.72.
72
109 The pottery work shop of Heeralal Seal at Colgong in Bihar, produced porcelain cups, plates, tiles
and insulators for European use and under a potter from England produced the finest table china,
comparable to the work of Staffordshire. Letter from A Hunter to Mr. Heeralal Seal of Colootollah, 11th
March 1867 & Letter from H.Seal to Hunter, 1 April 1867, A.Hunter, Correspondences, pp.39-40.
110 T. Guha - Thakurta, The Making ofNew Indian Art, pp.70-71.
Fig.33. W.H.Jobbins, “Antique Bust,”
[pencil, 1885-86]
Courtesy: CSSSC Archives.
School to one premise, also aimed at creating a great art centre that
would effectively shape the public taste and give impetus to fine
arts.116 Crafts practice at the Calcutta School of Art, it seems, was
mainly confined to the production and display of clay casts of tribes
for ethnological purposes.
116 Proposals, submitted by the Government ofBengalfor the Partial Reorganization of the School of
Art, The Art Gallery and the Indian Museum, BGP/E, April 1887, Nos-B.21-22, p.4. See also T.Guha -
Thakurta, The Making of a New Indian Art, p.66.
117 Ibid., pp.4-8. T.Guha-Thakurta, Ibid, p.65.
118 Ibid., pp.6-8. T.Guha-Thakurta, Ibid, p.66.
119 Prafiilla Kumar Sarkar, “Vividha Prasanga-Mritshilpi Jadunath Pal,” Bharat varsha, Chaitra, 1323
BS. Kamal Sarkar, Bharater Chitra o Chitrasfulpi, Calcutta, 1984, pp.34, 52. 168-9, discussed in
T.Guha -Thakurta, Ibid, p.70. See also T.N Mukherjee, op.cit, pp.59-67.
Fig.34. Example of architectural design with foliage motifs from a temple
ceiling panel, Gujarat. From Technical Art series,1887.
u 'fy\ .j
* rr+t
artisans into new pastures. The scheme had a vast potential but proved
to be limited in implementation.
120 Technical Art Series afIllustrations ofIndian Architectural Decorative work, Calcutta,
1887JPassim.
121 J.C. BagaL, History, p.18.
122 RJSTathan, Fourth Quinquennial Review, Progress of Education in India 1897-8-1901-2, Vol-1,
p.282.
PrwlJ*U. B**
123 Alfred Croft, “Progress of education between 1881-82 and 1884-85,” Review[First] of Education in
India in 1886, p. 82.
124 E.W.Collins, Report on the existing Arts and Industries in Bengal, Bengal Secretariat Press,
Calcutta, 1890, pp.85-7.For eg.Maharani Swamamoyee offered an endowment of Rs 20,000 for
technical education in Murshidabad. BGP/E, March, 1887, Procs.NoJ326-28.
77
129 T.N.Mukheijee, Monograph on the Brass and Copper Manufactures ofBengal, Office of the
Superintendent Govt, of India, Calcutta, 1894, pp.9-1 l.T. Sarkar, Hindu Wife Hindu Nation, p.60.
79
social gulf between the ‘artists’ and ‘artisans’ in the institution. What
the colonial craft policy ended up doing in most cases, was
transforming several of the traditional skills to meet the artistic
demands of the colonizers and the Westernized middle class. This
chapter has demarcated the institutional framework within which the
‘decorative’ or ‘lesser arts’ evolved as a focus of official training and
tutelage, gradually drawing in and subsuming a broader gamut of rural
arts and crafts within its fold. Even within the schemes of the colonial
exhibitions, there was a hierarchy of crafts ranging from the luxury
crafts to the functional objects for the ordinary masses. The entire
project of display through exhibitions and museums involved a specific
agenda of structuring the ‘industrial arts’ of the empire, but the point
of departure was to focus on the commercial aspect of the artifacts
rather than those of ordinary ritual use. Caught in this paradox, rural
art forms, some of which would later come to acquire the new aesthetic
and ideological connotations of ‘folk art,’ were left untampered in the
colonial scheme of art education. Moreover, craft promotion was all
too often rooted in a Western pedagogic framework where, for
instance, clay human figures were displayed as an introduction to
ethnographic knowledge. It was this associational knowledge of the
objects that came to be valued rather than the aesthetics of
craftsmanship. In the profiling of the crafts in the art schools, this
colonial discourse implicitly underscored the middle class tussle to
establish their professional status and acquire a training thqt would
transcend an artisanal identity. Thus, even as colonial art education
presaged the emergence of professional artists, it also led to the
maturing of a new middle class perception of crafts and craftsmanship,
that would by the turn of the century be transmuted into a new
nationalist idealization of rural and folk art in Bengal.