WHEN grand homes outgrow their owners, they have no option but to become museums. Notable are the Louvre in Paris, Tsarskoye Selo outside St Petersburg, the Kremlin in Moscow, and the Hofburg in Vienna. In the UK, the royal residences of Hampton Court and Windsor Castle have become quasi-museums. If King Charles III has his way, the state and royal rooms in Buckingham Palace too will become available to the public as a full-time museum. (Its former Royal Chapel is already a mini Royal Gallery.)

Smaller benefactions associated with their donors are the Wallace Collection in London, assembled in the 19th century by Sir Richard Wallace. In its 25 galleries are displayed Old Masters, French 18th-century paintings, furniture, and armour. Further afield is Powis Castle in Wales. There, on shameless display, are the ill-gotten gains of the 18th-century kleptomaniac Robert Clive acquired during his stay in India. “These in­­clude Tipu Sultan’s magnificent state tent, made of painted chintz; gold and bejewelled tiger’s head finials from Tipu’s throne [,] precious objects in jade and ivory”.

Many royal residences in India have un­­d­ergone a similar conversion: in Jaipur, the Ci­­­­ty Palace houses the Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II Museum and its prime treasure — the illustrated Razmnama (a translation into Persian of the Hindu epic Mahabha­rata), commissioned by Emperor Akbar in 1574. The Maharaja Jaipur’s Delhi reside­n­­ce is now the National Gallery of Modern Art.

Many Indian stately homes have become hotels. Pre-eminent among them is Udaipur’s shimmering white Jag Niwas (now the Taj Lake Palace hotel), seemingly afloat in Pichola lake.

The closest we have to a ‘royal collection’ is that of the Talpur family.

Less grandiose and more specialised is the privately managed Calico Museum of Te­­­xtiles, founded by textile magnate Gaut­­am Sarabhai in Ahmedabad. Expanded over the years by his family, its magnificent collection is a homage to the versatility of Indian art.

Within the old family home called The Retreat is a haveli, housing “religious textiles, as well as south Indian bronzes, Jaina art, and Mughal miniature paintings”. In an adjacent ‘Chauk’ are displayed “royal tents, carpets, furnishings and costumes of the Mughal and regional courts; textiles for India’s export trade, as well as a wide range of ethnographic textiles”.

Ingeniously, the remodelled family swimming pool’s walls are used as a gallery and a huge antique Mughal tent covers the whole pool as a decorative ceiling.

Such application of patrician wealth to plebeian benefit has no parallel in Pakistan. For one thing, former princely states like Bahawalpur, Khairpur and Swat were comparatively modest in their means and provincial in their reach.

The closest Pakistan has to a ‘royal collection’ is that of the Talpur family in Hyderabad. Select objects from this tantalising hoard amassed by the mirdoms of Hyderabad, Mirpurkhas and Khairpur were shown to the public (many items for the first time) at the Mohatta Palace Museum in September 1999. Titled Treasures of the Talpurs, the objects on display included “rare jewellery, ceremonial textiles, historical manuscripts, decorative objects, furniture, paintings, arms and armour”. Even these remnants were enough to re­call the wealth of the Talpur amirs, which had so excited Charles Napier’s avarice in 1843.

Rather like the Sarabhai’s Calico Museum in Ahmedabad, the Mohatta Palace Museum in Karachi is a laudable example of private sector initiative filling the void of public sector inertia.

The beige sandstone Mohatta Palace was built in 1927 by Shiv Rattan Mohatta, a successful Marwari entrepreneur. After 1947, it served as Pakistan’s first foreign affairs ministry when Kar­a­chi was still the capital. In 1964, the pala­­ce was given to Mo­­­h­tarma Fatima Jinnah. It remained with her family until 1980.

Neglected thereafter for 15 years, it was purchased by the Sindh government and the federal government (a rare collaboration) “to house a museum that would foster awareness and appreciation of the cultural heritage of Pakistan and of the region”.

Substantially remodelled, it opened as a museum in September 1999. Since then, its Board of Trustees has expanded the display area from the original three to 44 galleries, using them to present thematic displays of textiles, tiles, Buddhist sculptures, antique maps, copies of the Holy Quran and modernist works by, amongst others, Sadequain. The museum has been heavily supported by private collectors.

To mark its silver jubilee, the museum is presenting an ambitious programme of ev­­e­nts, including on Jan 5 a session on the bar­d­­ic tradition, featuring the Tilism-i-Hoshruba, to be recited by NAPA-trained dastangohs.

As the year 2024 stares at us stark and barren, such cultural endeavours are not occasional distractions. They are the distaffs around which are spun the precious skeins of our national culture.

The writer is an author.

www.fsaijazuddin.pk

Published in Dawn, January 4th, 2024

QOSHE - A cultural distaff - F.s. Aijazuddin
menu_open
Columnists Actual . Favourites . Archive
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close
Aa Aa Aa
- A +

A cultural distaff

91 0
04.01.2024

WHEN grand homes outgrow their owners, they have no option but to become museums. Notable are the Louvre in Paris, Tsarskoye Selo outside St Petersburg, the Kremlin in Moscow, and the Hofburg in Vienna. In the UK, the royal residences of Hampton Court and Windsor Castle have become quasi-museums. If King Charles III has his way, the state and royal rooms in Buckingham Palace too will become available to the public as a full-time museum. (Its former Royal Chapel is already a mini Royal Gallery.)

Smaller benefactions associated with their donors are the Wallace Collection in London, assembled in the 19th century by Sir Richard Wallace. In its 25 galleries are displayed Old Masters, French 18th-century paintings, furniture, and armour. Further afield is Powis Castle in Wales. There, on shameless display, are the ill-gotten gains of the 18th-century kleptomaniac Robert Clive acquired during his stay in India. “These in­­clude Tipu Sultan’s magnificent state tent, made of painted chintz; gold and bejewelled tiger’s head finials from Tipu’s throne [,] precious objects in jade and ivory”.

Many royal residences in India have un­­d­ergone a similar conversion: in Jaipur, the Ci­­­­ty Palace houses the Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II Museum and its prime treasure — the........

© Dawn


Get it on Google Play