Garden and Cosmos is in need of perspective

5 April 2012

In the precious little world of the art critic there is a general assumption that, as long as what he is despatched to see is in some sense art, he should be capable of writing a critical essay on it. For this, Roger Fry, a fine old fruit of Bloomsbury, must take the blame. He it was who, having in 1910 introduced the British public to the thrills of Post-Impressionism (a term he invented but did not understand), then went on to bully them into being fashionably interested in ancient art from Mesopotamia and the Aegean, from China, India and Egypt and with equal assumption of authority and expertise, lectured them on the art of Peru and Mexico and the much more recent art of what he called "the great majority of negro cultures". Of none of these did he know anything other than scraps of second-hand opinion garnered from supposedly scholarly magazines such as the Burlington, to which he himself was a frequent contributor of bric-a-brac, scattered all over with quaint conceits of intuition.

I am not a follower of Fry. There are vast fields of art and artefact in which I have scant interest and cannot even pretend a measure of curiosity — and one of these is Indian art. This I can just about see through Rembrandt’s eyes but not my own, and at the British Museum’s current exhibition of Indian paintings from the courts of the Maharajahs of Jodhpur, much later than those that Rembrandt knew, without his help my mind was almost inert.

With desperate effort, I looked at birds and animals, at racing elephants and conjugating ducks and, confronted by the exquisite unrealities of landscape and the artists’ total incomprehension of perspective, I thought of Italian painters in Florence and Siena seven centuries ago and judged their awareness of these things to have been infinitely more intellectual and enquiring. And then I thought of Europe in the 18th century, the Age of Reason and Enlightenment, the very period when these Indian painters began their business of recording the courtly pastimes of sport and sex in Jodhpur and the cosmological beliefs and notions that were their spiritual and intellectual diversions. I thought of Newton and Herschel, of Mozart and Tiepolo, and the whole edifice of this shallow Indian trivia as art — as art that is not only metaphysical and spiritual but art that "addresses the interior world of philosophical speculation and the origin of the universe" — came tumbling down.

The dependence on formula and pattern-making, the obsessive repetition of details that, were they singular, would be intriguing, but the overall effect of which, in rank after rank, scaled disproportionately large or small according (I suppose) to their importance in class or caste, is swiftly tedious. Space is flattened and architecture and other motifs that in western art have since ancient Roman times been employed to suggest the real space of distance and recession are distorted to conform with vertical spacelessness. Clumsy profiles, heavily and crudely drawn, adapt the human subject too to harmonise with this spacelessness; there are figures in full frontal and three-quarter view but these are comparatively few. In spite of my disliking him so much, I am inclined to quote Fry: "In short, we find here the same defect which lies at the root of the Indian genius, the want of co-ordinating intelligence."

By implication, British Imperialism in the 19th century is a subtext of this exhibition, for it was our spreading conquest from southern Kerala to northerly Kashmir that brought to its end this brief cultural flowering under a small handful of Maharajahs between 1725 and 1843, the year in which we deposed the last of them and General Napier achieved the notorious taking of neighbouring Sind. By the token of these paintings, however, I am inclined to think that this small cultural phenomenon was already mired in aesthetic decline. Perhaps Fry had it in mind when he described Indian art as "excessive and redundant... an extravagant and exuberant fancy which seems uncontrolled by any principle of co-ordination... the quality of its rhythms a nerveless and unctuous sinuosity". For once, I find myself in broad agreement with this odious man but then I, too, in this matter, speak from the unrepentant ignorance of a wholly western eye.

Garden and Cosmos: the Royal Paintings of Jodhpur is at the British Museum until 23 August. Sat-Wed 10am-5.30pm; Thurs and Fri 10am-8pm. Admission £8, concs £6 (020 7323 8181, www.britishmuseum.org)

Gardden and Cosmos: the Royal Paintings of Jodhpur
British Museum
Great Russell Street, WC1B 3DG

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