Search This Blog


Wednesday, June 5, 2013

INDIA- CULTURE ENCOUNTER


A. Cultural Encounter

The first contact between Mughal Empire and European travellers was first initiated in 1573 after the emperor Akbar led his forces into Gujarat and captured the great port city of Surat.

As a result of his encounter with members of the Portuguese settlement at Goa, Akbar sent an embassy to Goa, which, in turn, stimulated several Jesuit missions to the Mughal court in the hope of converting these leading Muslims to Catholics.

The Jesuits brought gifts, prints and paintings that are then shown to the royal artists who adapted and copied certain elements within the distinctive Mughal style.

Example of a refined, naturalistic painting done by an unknown artist at the Mughal royal court between 1600 and 1610. This shows how the Christian subject is reworked within the Characteristically Mughal style.  






B. Jesuit Missions to the Mughal Court
The Jesuits: Cultures, Sciences, and the Arts, 1540-1773 Volume1
18/ The Truth-Showimg Mirror: Jesuit Catechism and the Arts in Mughal India by Gauvin Alexander Bailey P.381-P.400


·         The mission was invited to Akbar's court for two purposes: (1) to provide Catholic debators for an interfaith forum, and (2) to provide works of European late Renaissance art for his enjoyment and his court artists' edification.

(1) Religious Impact
The Mughal misson of the Society of Jesus to convert to Catholicism is viewed as a failure.
It, however, provoked a literary partnership of great subtlety and erudition.
·         Akbar's goal in holding the religious debatees was not to abandon Islam, as many have maintained, but to create a syncretic brotherhood.

·         To be specific, he took on the dual meaning of the Islmamic proclamation Allahu Akbar - translated to both 'God is Great' and 'God is Akbar'. The emperor admired many aspects of Catholicism and was impressed with Jesuit rhetorical style and ritual. He tried to imitate them but did maintain his original agenda to only adopt Catholic devotional art.
·         The context of Jesus, Mary and the saints remained Indian, as biblical stories were related to a wide range of Koranic and even Hindu traditions, allowing the emperor to maintain ideological control over both major ethnic groups in his realm.

(2) Cultural Impact
The Mughal mission is regarded as one of the most flourishing artistic exchanges.
The Jesuits provided a representative collection of European engravings, paintings and statues. So Mughal artists were able to master the Late Renaissance style. 


PICTURE 2

PICTURE 3

Akbar and Jahangir helped erect churches in Mughal cities (PICTURE 3) and covered their palaces, gardens, tombs, jewellery and royal albums with pictures of Christ, the Virgin Mary and a panoply of Catholic saints. (PICTURE 2)

·         Xavier's Persian literature had a profound and lasting effect on the intellectual life of the Mughal court.
In the Truth Showing Mirror, Xavior applies Ciceronian rhetorical justifications to images, showing how they can delight, teach and move. He draws on another classical notion, the Aristotelian concept of 'inner senses' common to both Islamic and Western European literature.
His justifications for imagery were taken very seriously by his Muslim patrons.

Jahangir began to cover the walls of his public architecture with murals of Christian saints, a practice which soon was imitated by members of The Turth-Showing Mirror, he commissioned a series of highly emblematic self-portraits in a short-lived attempt to adapt the European Renaissance frontispiece to imperial portraiture.

The first Islamic paintings to make use of complex allegory are the direct result of discussions in the debates. 


No comments:

Post a Comment