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Architecture reflects the spirit of an age; it is an expression of the aesthetics of that
time. With the coming of the Mohammedans, a remarkable change in architectural style
and art forms was seen in India. By the end of the 16th century, the Mughal rulers firmly
established themselves and began to construct mosques, forts, and palaces as visible
symbols of their splendour. The Mughal Dynasty is a line of Muslim emperors who reined
over India from 1526 to 1707 before they were eclipsed by the Marathas. The first Mughal
emperor, Babur, was a descendant of the Turkish conqueror Timur; he invaded India from
Afghanistan and founded the Mughal Empire on the ruins of the Delhi Sultanate. The
Mughal rulers were largely tolerant and refused to be led by the Ulema and that was the
reason for the cultural eclecticism of that time. The Mughals went against rigid religious
rules and openly accepted the fusion of arts. They seemed to have believed in Hindu
astrology, divination, magic, and Tantra. This helped in bringing cultural harmony in art
and architecture. The remarkable flowering of art and architecture under their rule
happened partly because the empire provided a secure framework within which artistic
genius could flourish and because it commanded unparallel wealth and resources in Indian
history. The Mughal rulers were extraordinary patrons of art with a fine cultural outlook.
They not only constructed beautiful monuments, but made use of different kind of motifs
on them which played an important role in providing aesthetic beauty to the monuments.
We can see this especially at Fatehpur Sikri.
The present work is an analytical study of Motifs in Mughal monuments with
emphasis on Fatehpur Sikri. The architecture of Fatehpur Sikri reflects the fusion of
different religious attitudes. The Mughals did not begin afresh but gave the medieval
architecture of India a new orientation and outlook. Whereas earlier Hindu architecture
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relied chiefly on sculpture and carving for ornamentation, the Mughals, because oftheir
love for colour and decoration, adopted new method of embellishment. Over time, the
decorative technique used in Mughal architecture also saw a transition. These decorative
patterns make aprofound impact because of the unique application of the various designs.
The changing motifs mirror the changes in social conditions and aesthetics. Although the
Muslim rule in India generally brought much destruction to Indian wealth, art, crafts and
temples, it was mitigated somewhat by the remarkable monuments constructed by the
Mughals, and the noveltyof the motifs chosenin their decorations.
In the red sandstone monuments of Fatehpur Sikri, Jehangir-Mahal and the other
buildings ofAkbar in Agra Fort and the tomb ofAkbar at Sikandara (Agra), some ancient
Hindu motifs are depicted with their symbolism in view but more with an eye to their
auspicious character and as architectural ornaments. The motifs were engraved with the
traditional skill and sometimes occupy prominent spaces in the surface decoration. The
tomb ofItmad-ud-Daulah and a few other buildings ofthe reign ofJehangir have symbolic
as well as purely ornamental motifs. The designs are mainly geometrical and naturalistic
and stylised. Shahjahan's age is remarkable for the evolution of typically Mughal motifs.
Hindu symbols like the purna-kalasa on the one hand and Islamic designs like the
stalactite on the other were conventionalized and used as artistic expedients. Similarly,
naturalistic and stylised floral motifs were formalized and employed universally in his
buildings as typically Mughal designs—in a wide variety of methods, e.g., carving, jali,
inlay, painting and stucco. This is how designs and motifs, indigenous, evolved in Mughal
art. In the age of Jehangir, the naturalistic floral motifs consisted largely of the influence of
Iranian motifs such as the cypress. Likewise, geometric designs, calligraphic art, the
arabesque and smoother themes of ornamentation are characteristically Islamic.
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This aspect of the art of Mughals, thus, reveals some interesting phenomena. It
tends towards the stylisation of natural flora. Imitation of nature with arealistic approach
appeals to their taste, but they were also inclined towards stylisation. This tendency also
demonstrates the creativity of Mughal art and its capacity to make its own inventions in
accordance with its necessities and artistic standards. There is also the creeper-motif
which is sometimes associated with the makara, but which is used mostly in the form of
spirals and scrolls on pillars, nook-shafts and panels on walls, particularly in their borders
and sometimes on vaults. This seems to have derived its inspiration from indigenous
sources.
Want of symmetry of plan, poverty of articulation, insufficiency of plastic
decoration, and an incongruous mingling of wood and stone are some points which the
Mughal rulers found in Indian architecture and this led Mughal rulers to shift their view to
a new concept of architecture. The architects, in fact, bestowed the whole of their attention
on the decoration of surfaces; and down to the last day the Mughal craftsmen always
displayed a greater ability in designing the most complicated ornaments and geometrical
figures. The grandly recessed portals of Indo-Muhammadan buildings seen in Fatehpur
Sikri never seem out of harmony with structural intentions; they areso finely proportioned
and perfectly adjusted to the whole buildings as never to disturb the balance of the
architectural design with their colossal dimensions. Theimpact of Islam is not only seen in
the aesthetic impression, but symbols and icons also passed into these works through the
hands of the indigenous builders because Fatehpur Sikri contain many art motifs like
chakra, Padma, Srivatsa, Puma-Kalasa, Svastika and Gavaksa which the Hindus had
employed symbolically in their religious shrines for two millenniums. The motifs depicted
in Fatehpur Sikri can be divided in to the category of floral, fauna, auspicious, geometrical
and calligraphy motifs, and through these motifs a unity and continuity in the art of India,
is maintained from the earliesttimestill the beginning of the modern age.
The monuments of Fatehpur Sikri appear to place great emphasison surface. As the
surfaces are given depth through the use of patterns in two dimensions, so the resulting
volumes are given a further dimension by the use of illusion. This illusion was created by
the play of light and shade, perspectives and the high and low relief carving of the motifs.
The study of the motifs analyses that the motifs reflected the ethnic and cultural taste of the
Mughal era. In addition the motifs reflected the personal preference of the ruler, which
further reflected the psychology of the rulers. In Fatehpur Sikri the application of the
Hindu auspicious motifs clearly reflects superstitious personality of the ruler. It also
denotes that by engraving such kinds of motifs, Akbar tried to bring political stability to
his region. The motifs also reflected a sense of security and safety because of depiction of
some fortunate motifs like the Puma Kalasha and the Swastik. They acted as a visual
communicator. Finally, the motifs of the Mughal monuments were depicted in a balanced
manner which added delicacy, rhythm, and harmony and all together reflected the aesthetic
unity of the monuments. |
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