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Poona Observer
13th Dec. 1894 |
There are few people in India who have not at some time or other of their existence, heard of Lala Deen Dayal, eminent Indian photographer and artist of Indore and Secunderabad. In Poona his unmistakable figure will bring back to me the events in connection with the late Duke of Clarence visit which he immortalised. At Indore he was veritable slave to industry and energy, and by dint of these inroads to success, he worked himself up to high favour with H H the Maharajah in particular and with the elite of the place in general. But it was at Hyderabad that he laid in deep set foundation a brilliant superstructure. Armed with nothing better than a good name and good nerves, he applied himself vigilantly to attain eminence in his profession. Not a few can call to mind the heroic perseverance with which Lala Deen Dayal toiled from an early stage of his career in Hyderabad. But his arrows were not shot in the air; he hit straight at the target and in a comparatively short time the effect became conspicuous. He was the first man to introduce a series of innovations in photography to Hyderabad. This he did with commendable forethought. But it was the excellence and accuracy of his work that soon made him popular at the Nizam’s court, at the Residency, in the military colony at Trimulgherry, and at that seat of Mohamedan nobility, Hyderabad city.
Recognised on all sides for his exceptional merit, Lala Deen Dayal soon found himself in larger demand than he expected. But unprecedented success such as this was not strong enough to turn his strong head. It might have intoxicated anyone else into giddiness, but on Lala Deen Dayal it operated merely as a stimulant to higher flights of ambition. He speedily exchanged his small premises on the Parade for a mansion in Staff lines, which he fitted up in style worthy of a welcome to a Prince. Indeed more than one Prince has honoured the studio with a sitting; and in addition to Princes a host of Anglo Indian celebrities have placed their foot-prints on the Brussels carpets which lie in Lala’s gorgeous reception room. Among these were H.H. The Nizam, H.E.H the late Duke of Clarence and Avondale, T.R.H the Duke and Duchess of Connaught, the present Czar of Russia, the Grand Duke George of Greece, the Grand Duke Sergius, H.R.H The Archduke of Austria Este, the King of Siam, Lord Landsdowne, Lord Roberts, the different Commanders in Chief of Madras, Lord Wenlock, etc etc. With a list similar to the above on his rolls, a feeble minded man might have thrown his head well back with pride. But it was not so with Lala Deen Dayal. Crowned with triumph after triumph, loaded with successes in his profession, praised by the great and the small alike, acknowledged favourably by the world, Lala Deen was Lala Deen still. He never seemed to have forgotten that humility and politeness were the primary essentials of his popularity just as they have been with every other successful man. To these virtues he held tenaciously and they were eventually recognised by His Highness the Nizam, who is never slow to recognise the veins of good in humanity. His Highness afforded numberless opportunities to Lala Deen Dayal which he seized as they were presented with the result that His Highness and Lala Deen came into frequent contact. A mutual recognition of virtues was clear. His Highness saw that Lala Deen was not a man to meet with indifference and Lala Deen observed with equal clear sightedness that to be a servant of His Highness was a greater honour to him than to remain a sine qua non to the public. Lala Deen accordingly was ever obedient to His Highness’s commands and only in March last he prepared to undertake a lengthy journey at a few hours notice to please His Highness. This was in connection with His Highness’ shooting excursion at Mankota. His Highness shot a pair of tigers, and immediately wired to Lala Deen Dayal to come up by special train to photograph them. With an unbroken record of servitude to His Highness it is no wonder that the spirited and genial photographer came in for a shower of favors from His Highness. First of all Lala Deen Dayal was graciously appointed photographer to H.E.H the Nizam. He was subsequently appointed “ Photographer on the staff of His Highness’ Government on a salary of Rs.500 a month, with the payment of arrears for six years, and, finally, created Raja Bahadur Mussavir Jung at the recent Durbar, a title of immense value and distinction to Hyderabad. In throwing off the old mantle for the new Lala Deen Dayal, or to allow him his proper title, Raja Bahadur Mussavir Jung has not forgotten that he owes a great debt of gratitude to his august master. He has very prudently chosen in future to work as a photographer for no one save the Sovereign who made him a courtier.
No one grudges Raja Bahadur Mussavir Jung his richly merited distinction, and what is equally worthy of notice is the fact that he has not a single enemy in Hyderabad. He is one of those men , who, by some mysterious influence, enlists friends rapidly. He is finished in Western culture, though he still clings fondly to Hinduism and he is as hail, hearty and energetic as a boy of fourteen. A career like his is worthy of a page to Smile’s “Self Help” but India is so wary of paying tribute to Ceasar, that the newly created Knight of the Deccan Realm must need only find honour in honouring his master in future.
The business of Lala Deen Dayal has descended to his two sons Lala Dharamchandra and Lala Gyanchand, two quick and enlightened youths who have gained much experience in photography under their father and who would do well to preserve their father’s qualities to pilot them safely through the world. |
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Imperial Images
(Giles Eyre, Londo. Dec - 1977) |
Lala
Deen Dayal in ‘A Short Account of my Photographic Career’ tells us that
he was born in 1844 at Sardana, near Meerut. He would, therefore, have
been thirteen at the time of the Mutiny; and in the thick of it. A decade
later, he was a draughtsman in the Secretariat Office at Indore, and had
attracted the attention of the Maharaja Tukoji Rao II. It was the beginning
of a life of princely and patrician patronage. In 1874, encouraged in
his study of photography by one of the ‘swells’ of the Indian Civil Service,
he was chosen to take a group-photograph of the Viceregal Party when Lord
Northbrook- that great friend to Edward Lear- was on a visit to Indore.
The next year, also at Indore, the Prince of Wales and his entourage patiently
posed for him. “Later, I accompanied Sir Henry Daly on his tour of Bundelkhand,
photographing views and native chiefs. After his retirement, I was patronized
by the successive Agent Governor Generals of the Central India Agency,
and in 1882/3 I travelled throughout Bundelkhand with Sir Lepel Griffin…
these photos were afterwards brought out in book form… printed in the
autotype process permanently by the ‘Autotype Company’ of London at the
expense of the Government.”
“In
1885, I was able to secure a group of H.E. Lord Dufferin, Marquis of Ava
(the Viceroy) with Sir Lepel Griffin; and having done some photographic
work for Lady Dufferin, which was to her entire satisfaction, I was subsequently
appointed photographer to H.E. the Viceroy.” At this point, Lala Deen
Dayal decided to retire from government service and dedicate himself to
professional photography. “During my travels, I came to Hyderabad, receiving
great patronage from the Nizam… I also found that Secunderabad was the
largest military station in India. The above facts induced me to build
a studio there for portrait work.”
At the end of the 18th century, the old tradition of Mughal miniature
painting was giving way to new forms more acceptable to European taste,
as the British took over the gorgeous East in fee. By then, Dayal was
a respected member of the Nizam's inner circle; he or a member of his
family attending each weekly durbar. There were the perennial hunts, parades,
and tours of the Nizam's dominions; and when he came home, it was to a
large and growing family. In 1910 he died; to be followed two years later
by Mahbub Ali Khan. With the passing of their patron, hard times set in
for the family. Osman Ali Khan, the new Nizam, was not interested in photography;
nor was he known for his generosity. In 1919 Gyan Chand died without sons
old enough to take an active part in the business.
All this happened sixty or seventy years ago. It has taken that length
of time for collectors to realize that early photography was an art form
worthy of their attention. This is the first exhibition given over entirely
to the work of a single 19th century Indian photographer. It is, we think,
the first in England, to illustrate with original photographs the vanished
Anglo-Indian world of the last quarter of the 19th century. We have chosen
Lala Deen Dayal not because he was primus inter pares but because he was
unique. He replaced the painter as a functionary of a prince's court at
precisely that moment when fashion and philosophy began to dictate that
aristocratic and upper class Indians should acquire the status symbols
of socially progressive Victorians, like the Cannings and the Dufferins,
whom they admired.
That infinite capacity for taking pains which we note in all Dayal's work,
contributed to his success as a portrait photographer. Indeed, the courtier
in him demanded that it should be so. Yet, educated as a draughtsman,
he had first turned to the camera to capture his country's architectural
heritage. He had trained his eye to isolate the poignant factor in every
scene. He went on to document more diverse aspects of Indian and British
society than any 19th century European photographer. Despite the limitations
of his equipment - the need for example, to 'freeze' the moving parts
of his picture for several seconds at a time - he alone was capable of
posing up to 300 people on a 10 by 12 inch plate. The elegance of the
image was carefully planned, but the effect was deceptively natural. Looking
back, we can see that his oeuvre is a microcosm of that Anglo-Indian world
which was at its apogee in the thirty years before the Western powers
decimated their youth and began to tear themselves apart in 1914. |
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Photography’s Pearless Patriarch
By K.S.R. Murthy, Raja Deen Dayal : 1844 - 1905 |
India’s
Deen Dayal, Britain’s William Henry Talbot and America’s Eastman were
united in interest although separated by distance. They had photography
in common. What is more, contemporaries as they were, each of this trinity
turned out to be an immortal in his own right.
When Talbot, the discoverer of the science of photography, was presenting
his first definitive paper on the subject to the Royal Society in London
in 1839, he could have little known that within five years there would
be born a bonny boy in Sardhana near Meerut destined to do his discovery
proud. Yet, that is what happened. More. The Sardhana boy so excelled
as a photographer that royal society waited to present itself individually
and in groups before his camera Interestingly the way he related to Eastman
is on a different scale. Deen Dayal was already 44, a seasoned photographer
and come a long way from Sardhana by the time the American had made his
Kodak No .1 in 1888. Reasonable it is to conclude that Dayal’s achievements
in photography had not depended on Eastman’s roaring successes in the
field of camera manufacture. Did Dayal make his own cameras? Possibly.
Because it is known that he got some lenses specially made for his use
and British suppliers looked upon his orders as a privilege, taking care
to inscribe them with the legend ‘specially made for Raja Deen Dayal.'
Few Indians could have commanded the respect of the then British overlords
so. This is all the more significant when we look at another comedy of
history. The same British rulers who had so brutally quelled India’s first
war of independence in 1856- the Great Indian Mutiny- were ten years later
offering themselves to Dayal to be ‘shot’. As cameras then were not made
for the trigger happy set as now, Dayal’s slow but precisely timed exposures
must have been methodical, premeditated ‘killings’ of a sort to leave
the titled hoipollai merry. From Queen Victoria down to the lowliest lord
of the Mrelur who dressed in tails, wore a top hat and sported a monocle,
the British ‘badralok’ of Dayal’s era in Indian photography just loved
such a killing at his hands.
Laughter aside, one serious question: As dry-plate photography did not
come on the world scene until 1873 and the first roll-film was not produced
until 1884, how did Dayal achieve the success he did? Talbot’s paper to
the Royal Society was entitled, ‘Some Account of the Art of Photogenic
Drawing, or the process by which Natural Objects may be made to delienate
themselves without the aid of the artists’ 'pencil' . This self-delineation
can be achieved, if said, by an exposure to light intensified by a lens
and fixed by chemicals. Tracing how he got the germ of an idea for making
this process possible, Talbot spoke about the ‘camera obscura’ principle,
known to the West from the XVth century. This was no more than the phenomenon
of a wall in a darkened room by say throwing up inverse images of a street
scene through some slit in a closed door or window. How to cause such
natural images to imprint themselves durably and remain fixed on paper
was the thesis of Talbot’s talk. Younger to photography by just five years
and older than Kodak No.1 by forty-four, how Dayal succeeded the way he
did is not known.
What is known is that, in the years between scientific exposition and
popular practice, Dayal grew up professionally to strike up thousands
of tantalizing graphic equations between himself on the one side and,
on the other, the torrid Indian Sun, some chemically treated plate glass
and the objects or persons he viewed from under a jet-black hood through
the rear flap of his unquestionably trunk-sized wooden camera with lenses
large enough to serve as locks on the front door of a treasury. That each
of these equations is a permanent visual statement of an evocative epigram
in light and shade and emulsion, much more vivid in image than the sale
reality it freezes into life is the mute tribute beyond all value to Dayal.
For he achieved what he did at a time when photography had no electricity,
no electronics, no ultrasonics, nor all that latter-day paraphernalia
of flash, din-rated films, built in aperture and depth-of-field settings
and light meters to speak of. Edison had not come out with his electric
bulb until 1879.
Today subatomic physics, space technology and medical research, among
others, are so dependent on photography. Did Dayal realise the potential
of photography for posterity when he traded in a lucrative career in civil
engineering for professional photography? And this at a time of transition
when India had just about come directly under the British Crown from the
East India Company, the first rail-roads yet to be laid, the roads built
and the bridges constructed in a country as large as all Europe? Dayal
appears not to have thrown in his towel in vain Because subsequent events
show he was a visionary, the practising prophet of photography in India,
its high priest and peerless patriarch to all of which the Nizami title
of ‘Raja’ or ;Prince’ adds but little.
If the English lords and ladies in India vied with each other to be photographed
by Deen Dayal during his lifetime, nearly seventy years after his demise
it was given to their cohorts in Britain to discover in Dayal’s photography
an art form worthy of appreciation. Late in the fall of 1977, an exhibition
was held in London of Dayal’s photographs with the imposing title ‘Photography
in India during the 19th century.’(Incidentally, India Office Library
and Records has some collection of Dayal’s work as referred to in its
report for the year 1974) As this exhibition was given over entirely to
the work of Deen Dayal, it is implied recognition that 19th Century photography
in India is just one individual’s - Deen Dayal’s. The exhibition aroused
a good deal of interest in Britain because, for the first time after the
transfer of power in 1947, the erstwhile rulers of India caught vignettes
of all that Queen Victoria and her successors had wrought in this country
in pomp and pageantry and their emulation by Indian Princes and potentates
on the one hand and the utter poverty and emaciation of the mass of the
people on the other. The exhibition drew good media support, notably from
the ‘Sunday Times’. Here again, the emphasis was not so much on the vanished
world of 19th century British India but on the uniqueness of Deen Dayal
as a photographer. Despite the limitation of his equipment and the necessity
for giving exposures lasting several seconds at a stretch, Dayal alone
was capable of capturing up to 300 people on a 10’’x 12’’ plate. The elegance
of the image was carefully planned, but the effect was deceptively natural.
How
did Dayal succeed? That is the unanswerable question even now. The ‘Photography
Annual’ 1979 also carries a potpourri of Dayal’s work as a curtain-raiser
on a book soon to be published in New York containing 120 duotone plates
of the partriarch’s work with text by Clark Worswick. However, what the
Annual says about 50,000 of Dayal’s negatives is not to be construed as
true but only as an indication of Dayal’s output. That some of his priceless
negatives are lost owing to several factors is undoubtedly true. Glimpses
of the life and times of Lala Deen Dayal are perhaps best given in his
own words if only to bring out the utter humility and dedication of the
man. The Nizam’s regard for Dayal was that personal and high for very
soon he was treated on par with the nobles of the court with the courtesy
title of ‘Raja’ having been conferred on him. Although a Jain, Dayal related
to the Nizam as ‘Raja’ Musavir Jung’- the enterprising warrior of photography.
In fact, the Nizam was taken up with this court photographer that he composed
a couplet about Dayal in Urdu to read : |
“In
the art of picture-making, skill surpassing all, A master of masters is
Lala Deen Dayal.” |
Encouraged by the prestige and patronage he had earned by his association
with the highest councils in the land at that time, Raja Deen Dayal set
about thinking of the future, his family, posterity and the people in
general. The result was that by 1886 he had he had established some of
the largest photographic Studios in Bombay, Indore and Secunderabad. These
studios proved to be so highly competitive with their European counterparts
in the country that there was not only a flight of custom into his studios
but defection of personnel from Bourne and Shepherd and Johnston & Hoffman.
In fact, The Bombay studio of Dayal was manned by European operators with
names like Wartenburg and Schultz. For 2 decades the Bombay studio flourished
and recorded some of the finest views of Bombay at the turn of century
in addition to classic portraits of its gentry.
Deen Dayal’s sons Gyanchand and Dharam Chand, were considered too young
and inexperienced. Dharam Chand pre-deceased his father in 1904 and the
Bombay studio was closed. When the patriarch of Indian photography joined
the ranks of the immortals, the business fortunes devolved upon Gyan Chand.
Following his death in 1919, his son Ami Chand has continued the business
with the precious talent, humility and dedication of his illustrious grandfather-Raja
Deen Dayal. At this writing in 1979 it is very much Ami Chand’s Diamond
Jubilee, being celebrated as a small token of tribute not only to his
pithamaha but the pithamaha of Photography in India. |
|
Article Published in The Englishman
15th March 1897 |
At
a time when the art of Photography is attracting so much attention in
India, it is interesting to observe that at least one of the Native practitioners
maintains his place in the first rank of the profession. Lala Deen Dayal
of Indore is known throughout India as one of the best photographers we
have, and his recent appointment as photographer to His Excellency the
Viceroy was thoroughly deserved. A portrait of Lord Dufferin is one of
the latest of his productions and is one of the best photographs of his
Excellency that we have seen and would compare favourably with the aptest
achievements of our best known European artists. Another of the reception
of the Viceroy by His Highness the Maharajah Holkar, the group comprising
Sir M. Wallace, Lord William Beresford, and other members of the staff,
is also extremely good, the likeness in each case being true and clearly
defined, and the arrangements showing an artists eye for composition and
effect. The Maharajah is seated with the Viceroy, and is surrounded by
his ministers and officials, and this whole makes a remarkably telling
picture.
It is not however in portraiture alone that Lala Deen Dayal excels. His
extensive series of views is a monument of artistic skill and patient
labour, and no better memorial of a visit to the country could be commended
to the notice of the traveler. Those in search of an appropriate present,
wherewith to delight and astonish their friends at home, would do well
to invest in a set of the wonderful pictures of Agra, Delhi, and the old
world cities of Central India, as well as of our own modern English cities
and of our favourite hill-resorts. Nothing could convey a more vivid idea
of the beauties and wonders of " the land we live in" - of its ancient
civilization, and the lavish memorials of its departed splendour; its
richly diversified vegetation, and its crowds of mingled races; the solitary
temple or masjid, deserted , save by the lingering devotee; the busy bazaars
and melas and bathing ghats; the sacred rivers, the rock cut temples,
and the communities of sacred apes; the palaces, the forts, the zenanas,
the tombs, the beautiful lakes, - all the striking scenes and incidents
of the panorama with which we are familiar, and which yet possess for
us an exhaustless interest. Here too the East and the West meet, and the
prosaic works of utility find a place. The great architectural legacy
of the Moghul Empire is surrounded by the achievements of modern engineering
science - the canals, roads, railways, and bridges, which are the substantial
gifts of English practicality and enterprise. As illustrations of the
various stages in the historical development of India, these photographs
have a very special interest, while they will be universally admired for
their artistic beauty.
India is prodigal of subjects for the lens, and it may fairly be said
that no artist has made more of his opportunities than Lala Deen Dayal,
who has roamed over the whole of Northern India, in pursuit of the beautiful,
the characteristic and the picturesque. He has levied rich tribute in
the divinely dowered capital of Akbar, and he has gathered many a gem
in Delhi, Secundra, Gwalior, Bundelkhand, Rewa, Ajmere, Jaipur, Alwar,
Bhurtpur, Deeg Bhopal, Sanchi, Malwa and Indore. On the west he has carried
his search as far as Bombay, while on the East he is quite at home in
the city of Palaces investing many of our familiar views with quite a
novel charm. From an artistic standpoint the views of Darjeeling are by
no means the least remarkable. The photographing of aerial effects has
made wonderful progress in the past few years and the specimens of Darjeeling
from the Indore studio are deserving of high praise. They are delicately
shaded and present a bright luminous appearance, the heaped-up masses
of clouds and the trailing diaphanous shroud of mist being clearly and
yet slightly defined.
In any such collection, as a matter of course, one naturally turns to
the views of Agra, and the artist is seen at his best in his photographs
of the famous buildings. The Taj Mahal has been happily described by Sir
William Hunter as a 'dream in marble designed by Titans and finished by
jewellers'; and here we are able to admire at once the beautiful balance
of this peerless edifice and the exquisite details of its decoration.
The view taken from the river is perhaps the most successful attempt that
has yet been made to grapple with the difficulty of presenting to the
eye the whole mass of the building without dwarfing its vast proportions.
Groups of bathers in the foreground serve to guide the eye and the towering
mass of the dome rises against the sky with all the mingled grace and
boldness of the original. The Pearl Mosque in the Agra Fort is also a
grand photograph and those who here behold the Moti Masjid for the first
time will readily assent to the judgment which pronounces it the purest
and the lovliest house of prayer in the world. Another gem is the interior
of the bath chamber in the Agra Fort Palace. The tracery with which the
walls are entirely covered is a thing to create enthusiasm even amid the
treasures of Agra, and it is here photographed in a strong side- light
which brings into a relief of silver-like clearness every leaf and tendril
of the magnificent design. |
|
World on a Glass Plate
Nancy Adajania, Times of India, Oct. 16th 1994 |
ln a portrait attributed to his son Dharam Chand,
Raja Deen Dayal positions himself in a Victorian chair. In his lap, the
legendary photographer holds the moon-shaped glasses through which he
recorded the velveteen veneer of skins and the fragile heads of noblemen,
images that threaten constantly to slip off the edge of a country famed
for its cotton, spices and slaves. It was only seven months after the
Frenchman Louis Daguerre presented the daguerreotype camera to the world
in 1839, that the device arrived on the counters of Calcutta’s photographic
firms. For the next 30 years, photography was to be an amateur pastime:
but after the Suez Canal opened in 1869, the trickle of photographic equipment
broadened to a flow, and created a large and growing clientele. Deen Dayal
(1844-1905) learnt to use the camera by trial and error. A government
servant, he began his distinguished career with the cultivation of a British
clientele: a circumstance he owed to his portrait of Lady Dufferin, whose
favour he won by keeping the light so soft that her wrinkles did not show
up. Just as he obliterated Lady Dufferin’s wrinkles with native cunning
, he adapted the alien recording device to his own conditions of land
and light, As Court Photographer to the Nizam of Hyderabad, he was honoured
with the title of Raja in 1894: at the same time, Queen Victoria bestowed
the Royal Warrant upon him. On the surface, Deen Dayal’s curriculum vitae
suggests a person who travelled an almost straight path of adequate compromise
with existing circumstances. How then did he create spaces of dissent
within the feudal-colonial framework? Like his fellow photographers of
that period, Deen Dayal undertook bumpy bullock cart rides to sites of
archaeological interest. Like them, he travelled heavy, weighed down by
the tonnage of tripod stands and ‘darkroom tents’ in which the wet collodion
plates had to be coated afresh before each exposure. Unlike some of his
fellow photographers, he was not, however, interested in merely capturing
exotic Indian locales or cataloguing diverse ethnic types to assist the
ethnographic schemes of the colonial administration. If he survived the
dogma of western compositional principles dictated by colonial taste,
it was because he retained an artistic affiliation with the miniature
and the bazaar traditions. As a kind of bilingual practitioner, Deen Dayal
switched with ease from western to indigenous conventions, but his best
work was done in the ‘tainted’ native mode. This mode largely denied the
post-Renaissance principle of perspective, and flattened its picture space.
To this convention belongs Deen Dayal’s Afsar Jung with a collection of
animal skins, Hyderabad, 1898. This is no static image of a man in breeches
prodding a tiger skin with his rifle butt. Here, the trophied skins flattened
on the wall assume fierce animation, branching out in different directions,
filling every inch of the space. They diminish the two hunters in the
picture into pygmies: decentred, Afsar Jung himself is reduced to a titular
head, rendered superfluous. Blurring into one another, the trophies become
the hunters, and the hunters are diluted into apparitions. Far from symbolising
the solidity of power, the frame turns fluid, swimming like a surreal
skin over one’s eyes. In another frame devoted to shikar, one sees Lady
Hardinge returning from a cheetah hunt on a bullock cart. The animals
are harnessed in suspended animation, the rider looks away. Next to him
are seated four ladies, one of whom dons a dark hunting habit. Behind
this woman in black stands a native in startling white clothes. He appears
so close to those sitting in the cart that his feet don’t rest on the
ground. Resisting gravity, he floats in his circumscribed space, threatening
to vanish from the top of the frame which edges his head. Outside the
cart stands another native, a footman in livery. His pose reminds one
of a quixotic conquistador exhibiting his imaginary fortunes. The cart
seems to stationed on a sloping, uneven road, hemmed in by a low parapet.
Deen Dayal sets up a field of multiple foci, in which to place his hydra-headed
subjects. Their gazes wander, sometimes hitting us in the eye, sometimes
staring past. And the photographer is not the only one who participates
in this multiple viewing; propped upon the low parapet, is a bleached
face, naked, sun burdened. A prisoner of Deen Dayal’s darkroom departures,
this native face holds fort at the edge of colonial experience. Its gaze
is persistent, it cannot be muted. The restlessness of Deen Dayal’s subjects
is significant: it signifies the bewilderment of the early victims of
the lens. They are not yet sitters, have not yet fully learnt the protocol
of pose and behaviour of the proper photographic subject. In theatre critic
Anuradha Kapur’s words, they are trapped in “the middle ground between
hypostatised icon and realistic portrayal.” Although they gaze sombrely
outwards like icons, although they are composed like figures in tableaux,
argues Kapur, they remain “individuals, with individual peculiarities;
the placement of hands, the tilt of a turban, the fall of a drape, make
singular, not typical figures” Their confusion is betrayed in the dispersed
gestures of their anatomy; even princes and feudal lords stare at Deen
Dayal’s lens, stripped of their authority by the foreign instrument, bemused,
anxious, vulnerable. It is a moment of painful historical transition.
Deen Dayal’s focus is never on the figure of authority; he seeks out the
fugitive, the bystander, the native attendant at the seams of history’s
radiant backcloth. Like their creator, these native attendants rehearsing
their borderline roles in successive photographs, are threshold figures.
They simultaneously record and contest the Indian and alien modes of visual
representation, as Deen Dayal did. That is why the stories at the crowded
seams continue to fascinate us today, while the tales of the heroes at
the centre have faded away like their short-lived fiefdoms. Deen Dayal’s
tendency to make the primary patron invisible illuminates Colonel D.Robertson,
Resident in Gwalior at a picnic, 1895. Robertson is only one among the
many faces in this loose assembly of picnickers. Scattered, yet bracketed
in the black-and-white quardrilateral, the picnickers look like victims
of arrested development. A woman smiles as she poses coyly with her umbrella.
Bordering her Victorian attire is a sculpted temple danseuse in a sensuous
tribhanga pose; this latter detail is so small that it could easily escape
one’s sight. Yet, it is this compressed detail which subtly subverts this
exotic picnic on the grass. Off-centre, a hat hangs miraculously, hugging
a relief-covered wall. The imperial heads that wore such hats have rolled
off but the headless hats remain suspended in mid-air, waiting for new
wearers. |
|
Raja Deen Dayal – He captured a moment and froze it into life
By Shehbaz Safrani |
Between
Meerut and Mahboob, stood the brilliant career of Lala Deen Dayal. Beyond
distance, Meerut was a dot on the 19th century cartograph of Hindustan.
Mahboob, patriarch of sovereign Hyderabad dominated way beyond his royal
dominion, the largest, wealthiest and technologically most advanced state
in princely India.
Aged 40, celebrated, Lala Deen Dayal arrived at Fateh Maidan during an
awesome parade, snapped an image of Mahboob, the most flamboyant and profligate
of the seven Nizams that ruled the grandest reign Muslims ever had after
the Moghal empire. Diligently the very next day following that incredible
parade, Deen Dayal presented just one photograph among the numerous he
had taken painstakingly, to His Highness, Mir Mahboob Ali Khan, the sixth
Nizam of Hyderabad, in 1884.
Deeply
struck by the excellence of that single image, and Mahboob had his share
of megalomania, he elevated Lala Deen Dayal as a life peer. Newly titled
Raja Musavir Jung, the talented photographer from Sardhana in Meerut,
ever cognizant of his humble roots, simply used only the first of his
knighted names. Since that venerable year till today the greatest photographer
of India is still remembered as Raja Deen Dayal.
Mahboob Ali Pasha completed his homework on Lala Deen Dayal meticulously,
much before the dramatic announcement at court that a photographer, virtually
unknown to Hyderabad's patricians had suddenly received a knighthood of
the House of Asaf Jah. Lord Dufferin had sent a letter about Lala Deen
Dayal to Mahboob. Besides, the reputation of Deen Dayal had preceded him
to Hyderabad.
Between 1866, when Lala Deen Dayal began photographing in earnest as a
youthful professional, and 1884, he had had 18 years for honing his skills.
His photographed results, meantime catapulted him to proverbial fame and
fortune. Never one to rest on past laurels, Deen Dayal who was a pious
and devout Jain, worked assiduously at his métier. It was this vast and
incomprehensibly astonishing body of photographs that had convinced the
British establishment at Calcutta, as well as Whitehall at London, that
it was opportune a moment to present the Empress of India, Her Majesty
Queen Victoria, with an album of photographs taken by Lala Deen Dayal.
The photographs of Raja Deen Dayal portray the geometry of Hyderabadi
society, the chemistry can only be retrieved by compassionate understanding,
a keen intelligence, removed from shackles of religion. Still Raja Deen
Dayal entered an otherwise unchartered quarter- the phantom world of Mahboob
Ali Pasha. Note that even when relaxed, Mahboob hardly ever smiles in
Deen Dayal's images. Poised? Indeed he directed, choreographed and set
a stage around himself. Ordinarily such histrionics would have emerged
as wooden and lifeless. Deen Dayal brought a magical skill, his camera.
At that time taking photographs required more time than it does presently.
He caught the moods of Mahboob. Introspective, ponderous, even when seated
among visiting dignitaries, any number of Queen Victoria,s brood, the
pathetic Romanovs, Mahboob was lost in a world of his making. All the
others, Mahboob's own entourage,his close military chief of staff, Sir
Afsar-ul-Mulk, have to be masked out. Isolated we begin to grasp a haunting
Mahboob, whose passion for latest fashions, weakness for women, propensity
for bloodletting sports, love for the citizenry of Hyderabad, failed to
assuage his melancholy. Was Mahbob in search of something that neither
the pleasures of the flesh could satisfy nor the treasures of his realm
acquire?
Mahboob surely must have chuckled in private that he was three years ahead
of Queen Victoria, more so the Whitehall in London, the source of political
power. Raja Deen Dayal received a royal warrant of appointment from Her
Majesty in 1887. Mahboob elevated Lal Deen Dayal as "Raja" in 1884. Here
we part royal company because Deen Dayal knew how his bread needed being
buttered. He was self made and self-reliant and his infrastructure depended
entirely on his skills.
At Roorkee where he graduated first-class from Thomson Civil Engineering
College, he scored 258 out of 260, completed in three years, a course
requiring five. Then he clocked in as a draughtsman at the public works
department at Indore. Maharaja Tukoji Rao II of Indore, attracted to the
excellence of photographs created by Deen Dayal, catalysed his success.
The dazzling Jain lad from remote Sardhana scaled the social ladder not
by kowtowing but by the superb quality of his photographs. His range included
archaeological sites, architectural marvels, portraits of people from
the mightiest of the land, the movers and shakers, down to the hapless
tribals, the have-nots. To each monument Lala Deen Dayal brought an unusual
perspective. From a people who created and coined the noblest of our words,
"Ahimsa" millennia before the Mahatma employed it as the lynchpin for
his silent army of peaceful resistance against the Raj, Lala Deen Dayal
introduced a distinctly Jain approach. Humanism prevails. Trees, the living,
not humans alone, quietly washing dirty linen at some bend in a river,
but goats, dogs entered the amazing repertoire of this, the most beautiful
of all Indian photographers.
An army of patrons vied and succeeded in extending their patronage to
the handsome Jain youth with a camera and his team of assistants. As a
rule until he died Deen Dayal spent 18 hours daily, taking photographs,
developing them, organizing surveys for documenting the geography, the
architecture, the ruins, the people of his beloved India. Invariably he
prepared albums, then and now, the most sought after because they contained
the perfect balance between the exotic and the romantic, the beautiful
and the bizarre that makes India gorgeously Indian.
Appointed
"Court Photographer" at Hyderabad by the sixth Nizam, Raja Deen Dayal
finally settled down at Secunderabad. Simultaneouly he had studios engaged
in thriving practice at Bombay and Indore. For women who preferred purdah
the ever astutely business minded Raja Deen Dayal created a zenana studio.
The new enterprise brought in more money since the zenana studio opened
in 1892. These were the twilight years but 50 photographic specialists
worked at Secunderabad.
Lord
Curzon, renowned for restoring the Taj Mahal, beginning the Archaeological
Survey of India, committed to preserving Indian antiquities in situ, visited
Mahboob,s Hyderabad in 1903. His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, visited
Hyderabad in 1905. During these two visits, Raja Deen Dayal outperformed
himself. He recorded for posterity a stupefying 5,000 photographs. Numbers
hardly mattered; virtually each photograph had his stamp of excellence.
Supervising quality control at his studio in Secunderabad seldom jeopardized
his artistic ambitions nor attention to the most minute detail hamper
his style. Personally Raja Deen Dayal transcended photography as a visual
document, enhancing its stature as an art. When he started out landscape
painting in oil on canvas was the norm but demand and means outstripped
supply. A number of European, particularly British artists such as the
Daniells, Edward Lear visited Hyderabad. Raja Deen Dayal encompassed the
yearning for Indian images. At Hyderabad, where palaces were open to a
few, closed for many, there were photographic albums available at Raja
Deen Dayal's. One had merely to name a palace, the encyclopaedic Deen
Dayal had an album for sale; Bashir Bagh, Falaknuma, Chow Mahalla. Terrific
inside-outside glimpses of a rare world of wealth and serendipity came
to life for those never privileged to tread within an elitist environment,
where time hung less obviously than crystal chandeliers. Today only at
a few public institutions abroad and at some, here in India, or at private
bibliophiles like Mohammed Safiullah, does one derive the vicarious pleasure
of marvelling at a bygone age. Invited guests on the other hand, received
Raja Deen Dayal's albums, either from His Highness the Nizam's government,
or members of the Paigah whose passion for architecture and landscaping
was the envy of their like in Hindustan.
Among
all princes of Hyderabad, one stood out for his largesse, his passion
for calligraphy, his love for the city: Maharajah Kishen Pershad; prime
minister of Hyderabad and the most learned courtier. Raja Deen Dayal has
left us with first rate portraits of Kishen Pershad.
Change
was evident. The first automobiles, manufactured in Europe, Great Britain
and even distant USA rolled onto ships and entered Mahboob's ample garages
in Hyderabad. Speed and automotive stylishness manoeuvred the handsome,
the lavish eight-and-six horse drawn carriages, slightly out of fashion.
Mahboob, like Sir Afsar, even Maharajah Kishen Pershad, retained an abiding
passion for horse riding. But elegant Rolls-Royces, Mercedes Benzes in
Hyderabad could have made real life Gatsbys awestruck. The dry climate
of Hyderabad was ideal for automobiles. Cognisant of technology at any
stage of its evolution manifesting its presence in royal Hyderabad, brought
Raja Deen Dayal to the fore. Mind you his photographic equipment was cumbersome,
if necessary. How he tracked to remote parts of India weighed down with
responsibilities and real gear should seldom be overlooked.
In
1892, Raja Deen Dayal meticulously noted the date, May 22nd, the latest
American technology arrived in Hyderabad. It was the new American treadle
phonograph. The scene takes place beneath that most ubiquitous of Hyderabadi
social tents suited for any function from marriages to funerals - the
shamiana. Hyderabad attendants are attired in their Sunday best but stand
indifferently to the telecommunications feat that would transform life
for good. It is the Europeans, or Americans maybe, four white women dressed
in white, complete with glorious top hats, whose animated response to
sound, piped directly into their ears via a longish tube, that elicits
our own reaction to this Deen Dayal image. A wondrous world was opening,
while that - though unknown to Mahboob - of old Hyderabad succumbing to
its own end. The record is momentous, Deen Dayal at his supreme best,
temporarily, time stands still.
Raja
Deen Dayal's years in Hyderabad were the most productive. He had made
an exhaustive photographic documentation that would make his name renowned
worldwide. Each art exhibition of the most orthodox, conservative, traditional
art of India, the festivals of India included, contained pictures taken
by Raja Deen Dayal. In India none dared hold a candle; abroad his renown
was established. At the great American, World's Columbian Commission at
Chicago of 1893, Raja Deen Dayal exhibited his remarkable photographs
and was given an award. He documented the Delhi Durbar of 1903, when Nizam
the sixth created such a diplomatic storm, refusing to alight from his
royal train until an elephant was brought inside the train station, close
to his carriage, to receive him. The parades, the pictures, the potentates,
the princes, the patricians, the plebeians, the pantomimes, the plutocracy
of Hyderabad, as well as of Hindustan featured in the encyclopaedic visual
corpus of Raja Deen Dayal. Surely his soul must have reeled with pain
at the sight of animals gunned down, then rearranged for the macho to
ignobly seat themselves upon such four legged royalty of the jungle of
Pakhal and Nirmal as the tiger. Birds and boars were similarly gunned
down for the vicarious pleasure of those whose lives were empty and the
forests filled.
We
are left spellbound at every image achieved through the unique eyes, the
gifted hands, and the Jain compassion with which Raja Deen Dayal bequeathed
them to posterity. An unfortunate lack of foresight on the part of the
state government, enabled the establishment at Delhi to purchase the largest
collection of Raja Deen Dayal photographs and house them at the Indira
Gandhi National Centre for the Arts.
Also
we may never learn the extent of personal rapport between the sixth Nizam
and Raja Deen Dayal. Two individuals of such extremes are difficult to
place in so harmonious a milieu as that of royal Hyderabad. During a hunting
expedition no less, Mahboob had the eminent artist photographer on his
mind to compose an Urdu couplet, that translates roughly as |
"In
the art of picture making, Skill surpassing all, A master of masters is
Lala Deen Dayal." |
|