The Wereldmuseum in Leiden has a fine collection of 134 drawings and paintings from the Punjab Hills (today Himachal Pradesh in India), commonly referred to as ‘Pahari miniature paintings’, and made from the 17th to the 19th century. Pahar in Hindi means ‘from the hills’ and refers to the lower Western foothills of the Himalayas. The drawings and painting covers a wide range of themes like Hindu epics, vernacular poetry, portraits of rulers, and historical figures. They illustrate the history and traditions of the region and showcases Indian techniques and crafts.
Bright colours, charcoal and brushes of squirrels’s hair
Amélie Couvrat Desvergnes is a paper and book conservator and researcher. She studied and conserved for two years 134 Indian drawings and paintings from the Wereldmuseum Leiden. In this collection story she tells about the making process, and about ‘master drawings’ - examples for beautifull paintings which are in museum collections all over the world.
Conserving and researching miniature paintings
An eye for an eye, a hair for a hair
An artist used brushes, pigments, inks and paper. Usually he made the brushes themselves, with animal hair such as goat, camel and cats. The finest brushes made from the hair of a squirrel's tail were used to draw very thin details such as the facial traits.
Enlighten a painting with gold and white paint
A painter also prepared the paints, from raw ingredients which were purchased from the market. Minerals such as vermilion, zinc and orpiment were readily available as they were commonly used in Ayurvedic medicine, as were organic materials such as indigo, lacquer and gums. Once the ingredients had been finely crushed, washed, and ground to a fine powder, they were mixed with gum and stored in freshwater mussel shells.
Photo: Vijay Sharma’s painting implements, colours in mussel shells, gum Arabic, kalam (bamboo reed), a stone of lead or zinc white and diverse brushes made with animal hairs. Painting gallery of the Bhuri Singh Museum in Chamba. (© Amélie Couvrat Desvergnes October 2022)
Paintings receiving substantial patronage (princes or rulers) were embellished with shell gold. Gold leaves were gradually rubbed with the fingers into a dish, adding a small amount of water and honey. Once the gold particles have dissolved, the mixture is washed, left to settle, sieved, and stored in a shell. Gold paint was sometimes engraved or stippled to reflect light and give texture to the surface. Drops of lead or zinc white were also applied to give relief to some details, particularly in jewellery.
Warming up with circles and spirals
The copy of extant models and practice of motives was a crucial part of an artist’s education. Students were used to warm up their hands by drawing circles, spirals as well as flowers and ornaments. These trial sketches are often found in the margins of some works. Artists also regularly copied portraits of famous personalities and complex figures such as horses, to train their precision and maintain their skill.
A step-by-step progress
The development of a composition is illustrated by a series of drawings from the Ramayana epic made in Kangra around 1800 and now preserved in Wereldmuseum Leiden. The artist first drew a rough outline using a charred twig. He then drew the secondary outline in red or yellow ink. Finally, he drew the final contours in black ink with a firm line. He used this last line as a basis for applying the colors. Opaque white paint was used to conceal flaws in the lines, which were then corrected with black ink.
Sometimes colour names were inscribed on the figures and served as indications for the future execution of the final painting. A detail of the drawing of ‘Krishna fighting the elephant Kuvalayapida at Kamsa’s court’ shows the colour annotations on the figures, indicating the colour to be used to paint the clothes.
Master drawings and completed paintings
he collection are also pieces known as ‘master drawings’, which were kept in the studio and served as a reference for the creation of finished paintings by future generations of painters. Final works can be found today in other collections, and it's fascinating to see the differences and similarities between the two versions.
Filling in the colours and polishing
Once the composition was complete, the artist applied a coat of white primer to the surface to soften the black contours. The motifs were then filled in with increasingly concentrated layers of paint. Regularly, after the paint had dried completely, the painter burnished the surface of the paper and colours with a polishing stone to close the pores of the paper and even out the painted surface.
Completing the details
Finally, delicate details such as jewellery, clothing patterns and facial features were added with the finest brushes, and the borders left blank throughout the process were painted or decorated.
The tradition goes on…
Today, artists like Padma Shri Vijay Sharma in Chamba (Himachal Pradesh) are helping to perpetuate traditional techniques. More often, they copy the works of old masters and respond to commissions using commercially available colors or paints they make themselves.
Amélie Couvrat Desvergnes has contacts with painters in India and visited them in fall 2022. She has carried out other conservation and research projects on Indo-Islamic and Hindu manuscripts and visual arts. Later this year Amélie will tell about the epics and narratives on the drawings and paintings and their conservation.