Define Patana school or company school with its characteristics?
(in detail)
Answers
Answer:
Define Patana school or company school with its characteristics?
(in detail)
Explanation:
Patna Kalam Painting is the link between the Mughal style and the British style. With the decline and subsequent fall of Murshidabad, the court artists looked westwards to the next biggest city in the East and started migrating to Patna. By 1750s, many of those artists had settled in Patna with their families, and under the patronage of local aristocracy and often Indophile scions of the early East India, started a unique form of painting which came to be known as the Company School or Patna Kalam
Characteristics of Patna Kalam Painting
The characteristics of the Patna Kalam Painting are given below:
1. Most of the paintings are of miniature category and made on paper. Later on the drawing on ivory, leather was started.
2. Paintings on the daily life are in abundance in this style.
3. Daily labourer, fish-sellers, basket makers dominate the subject of these paintings.
4. Patnia Ekka (horse-cart of Patna) is the oldest painting style. Shivlala’s ‘Muslim Wedding’, Gopal Lal’s ‘Holi’, Mahadev Lal’s ‘Rani Gandhati’ are the famous creations of this style.
5. In this style of painting, colours are extracted from indigenously plants, barks, flowers and metals. Paintings are characterized by light coloured sketches and life-like representations.
6. One of the important characteristic of Patna Kalam is that usually they do not paint any landscape, foreground or background. Another unique feature of the Patna School of Painting was the development in the shading of solid forms.
7. Paintings are painted straightway with brush without using pencil to outline the contours of the picture. This technique was commonly known as ‘Kajli Seahi’.