Royal Rajah

Did this for TimeOut Delhi. A short profile of celebrated photographer Raja Deen Dayal whose works are on display at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts until February:


As a 20-year-old student at Thomson’s Civil Engineering College in Roorkee, Deen Dayal was content sketching plans for roads, buildings and canals. It only happened that, in the final year of his course, the college faculty introduced photography as a subject. That was how Dayal came to be quite prepared when, in 1866, as he sat in his draughtsmans’ office at the Indore Public Works Department, he received the news that all draughtsmen were to be replaced by photographers. It was time for Dayal to shed his drawing instruments, pick up the camera and begin a legendary career of photography.
This fortnight, 200 of Deen Dayal’s photographs will be dusted off and exhibited at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts, the bulk of them on display for the very first time. The images in Raja Deen Dayal: Studio Archives from the IGNCA Collection range from portraits of Indian royalty to grand shots of monuments. Just like the other non-royal Raja, his exact contemporary Ravi Varma, Deen Dayal skilfully adopted a European technology that Indians had had little access to, became a greatly sought-after artist, and broke a new frontier in the visual capture of nineteenth-century Indian life.
“What made Dayal special was the way in which he photographed monuments and portraiture,” said Jyotindra Jain, the director of the IGNCA, who curated the exhibition along with Pramod Kumar KG. “In his portraiture, he recorded almost the entire lifestyle of the sixth Nizam of Hyderabad, Mehboob Ali Khan. The British hired him to photograph 78 monuments in central India, and he became famous because of the manner in which he took them. He’d use a slightly low angle to shoot a monument, so its upper part would appear against the sky. The contours of the monument would be extremely clear. But it wasn’t just Dayal’s talent that won him fame. He combined his skills with a tenacity that ensured his friendship with the high and mighty of that era.”
Deen Dayal used his friendship with Maharaja Tukoji Rao II of Indore to have himself introduced to Sir Henry Daly, the British Agent at Indore. Daly had Dayal appointed the official photographer of the Prince of Wales’ tour of India in 1875. Later, he was appointed official photographer to Viceroy Lord Dufferin. “After that, there was no limit [to the extent of his work],” said Jain. “He scored over British photographers because even they didn’t have that kind of access to maharajas, the upper classes and nobility. Being an Indian, he established a certain rapport with these people, and it reflects in his work that his sitters were much more comfortable with him.” In his fourties, he was appointed court photographer to the Nizam of Hyderabad, who gave him the title Raja.

Dayal worked in a time when the tools of photography were still rudimentary, yet he created some stunning clear visuals. Photographers used glass-plate negatives, which required long exposures and extreme care. Another striking quality is “the quality of performance in his photography”, Jain said. “The people who he photographed were always performing. For example, the Nizam of Hyderabad held a durbar thrice week. He and the visitors would dress up, and there was a certain hierarchy [of who followed whom]. The whole scenario was almost a theatre backdrop, in front of which these people performed. Deen Dayal understood this element of performance he was photographing and that drama comes out very well in his photographs.” No wonder then that his patron the Nizam composed a couplet in praise of Dayal: “Ajab yeh karte hain tasvir mein kamaal kamaal/ Ustaadon ke hain ustad yeh Raja Deen Dayal [In the art of photography, surpassing all/a master of masters is Raja Deen Dayal].”

2 comments: (+add yours?)

Froggy Knickerbocker said...

Hi Aayush! I'm loving your blog, reading it in Los Angeles. ;) I'm visiting India for the first time next month and I've been doing some research before my trip. I know this is super random, but I read a book about a hometown hero of mine from the Victorian era, Aimee Crocker. She visited India in the late 1880s/early 1890s and befriended at least one maharaja, as well as some other interesting locals. She named them in her memoir, but I think she used fake names. She described some of their adventures and some of their locations (and claims to have visited a harem for a brief period). Can you point me toward someone with knowledge of maharajas from that time period who might be interested in discovering new (old) accounts? My research has also led me to Shakespearean actor Edmund Russell, who was friends with Raja Ravi Varma, His Highness Gaekwad III, and likely many other notables. He visited India just before the turn of the century. Again, I know it's a longshot, but if you know of anyone who is up for solving mysteries and digging through Indian & American alliances, please let me know!
All the best,
Courtney

Aayush said...

Hi Courtney,

Thank you for the kind words on my (now neglected) blog. Re: your query on Indian maharajas, I've asked some people I know and, hopefully, should hear back from them sooner or later. Meanwhile, if you do a google search about books on Indian maharajas, you'll find results that can fill up a library. Go through them, jot down names of the authors and I'll try my best to put you in touch with them. Also, do you use Google/Facebook chat? I ask only because I prefer private conversations on either of these two media rather than on a blog meant for public consumption. I'd love to talk to you more about your research and your forthcoming trip to India (my email ID: aayushsoni at gmail dot com).

Hope to hear from you soon.

Best,
Aayush

P.S. Re: Raja Ravi Varma, I did a piece on him recently for NYT's India blog: http://nyti.ms/18frDLk

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