Laila Persuading
Majnun
This
Mughalia version of Laila-Majnun legend represents both, the folk
tradition relating to this great romance and the classical phase
of medieval art. Though the legend of Laila Majnun has its origin
in Nizami's Khamsa, the twelth century epic of this Persian poet,
yet several elements added here are born of popular tradition and
many of them are artistic innovations. The artist has knit around
the folk of Majnun an animal world consisting of animals both real
and conventional, wild and domestic and those of sky, earth and
water out of sheer imagination. Animal study is by itself a distinctive
feature of the painting. The artist has created out of Majnun's
legend a zoo with such enormous variety of creatures.
Quite strangely and exclusively, by adding
to the entire depiction a Krishna figure holding upon his shoulders
a pot with water gushing out from it the artist has somewhat Indianised
the tale and has imparted to it a different kind of symbolism. In
Indian aesthetics pot stands for earth. Here in the painting the
pot is seen intaking water into its base and is discharging it from
its mouth, that is, the mother earth receives all heavenly waters
and lets them flow in courses for life and it is the divinity that
holds the earth to let her perform her pious obligation. Vishnu
as Krishna here is the presiding deity of the earth. The artist
seems to symbolise through this set of motifs that love and life
would prevail till the divines uphold the earth and flourish it
with life's nectar.
Majnun, the hero of the legend, desperate in Laila's love retired
to the forest after he failed to win her. Laila too loved him but
family traditions barred her union with him. With all interests
in life lost Majnun submitted himself to wild animals to be eaten
up by them. But the artist discovered that the world of animals
was more compassionate, friendly, sympathetic and unbetraying than
that of the man. Hence, all kinds of animals,
lions, lionesses, cheetah, wild bears, boars, jackals, snakes, vipers
of all kinds, elephants, nilgais, rabbits, crocodiles, rhinoceros,
antelopes, many kinds of fish, deers, birds and many more,
gathered around and cordoned him. They could not help him but shared
his grief. The face of each animal in the painting has the reflection
of Majnun's sad plight.
One hearing all about Majnun Laila failed
to control herself. She visited him in the forest with a priest
and some of her companions, says one version of the legend, or with
the Holy Book, says the other, though the significance of both is
the same. With the help of holy scriptures she wanted to ignite
in Majnun's mind the desire to live and to accept all that happened
as the course of destiny. In the painting the youthful damsel is
seen reading out to Majnun from the Book but Majnun pays obviously
no heed to it. By the action of his hand he seems to be requesting
her to rather put it off. The painting is a reminscent of the great
Mughal art of late sixteenth century.
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