Thursday 23 December 2010

Raja Deen Dayal Photography exhibition

Today my friend suggested we go to the Raja Deen Dayal Photography exhibition.This exhibition was in my wish list so I just grabbed the oppurtunity We reached the Indra Gandhi National centre for Art .
Raja Deen Dayal was born in 1844 at Sardhana near Meerut He recieved his technical education from Thomson Civil Engineering College Roorkee and workedin PWD at Indore .He was encouraged to set up his studio by the RulerTukoji IIIn 1896 he expnded his studio in mumbai and established studio in Secundrabad.He photographed the VI Nizam -Nizam Mahaboob Ali Pasha. He also photographed British,military exercises,hunting expeditions,Nizam palaces-Falaknuma,Aina mahal,Gwalor Fort,Lake Palace to name some and their territory.Other than Nizam Mahaboob Khan he also photographedthe nobility in Hyderabad-Asman Jah Bahadur,Afzar Jung Bahadur,Kishen Preshaad etc
Among his various photographs is a photo that captures unposed ,natural photograph of people listening to first phonograph.

 Another photograph named "The Royal Champion Crackshot"is about a shikar expedition which was chronicled by hunting trophies and gigantic displays showing skinned animals .
He died in 1905.

the hunting expedition
the citadel of Orchcha
Interiors of Bashir Bagh Palace
Raja Deen Dayal

street in Hyderabad looking towards Charminar

Monday 20 December 2010

walk within the nizamuddin basti


Nizamuddin Basti Walk
This heritage walk to the basti was organized by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture.We all were supposed to gather at the Shiv Mandir, Hazrat Nizamuddin basti (near Lodhi crematoriWe were introduced to our guide Mohd. Umaer .He started with the history of Nizamuddin .He told us that the village got its name from the famous Sufi saint Sheikh Nizam-u-din Auliya of the chisti order and hence started our journey back to the 14th century

The Phoolwali GaliWe went through this only surviving archway that once surrounded the settlement. It was made by Pir Inayat Khan further we went  and saw the tombs of Pir Inayat Khan and his son Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan (which was done beautifully with marble   mosaics)






 From here we moved further into the narrow lane to see the Kalan masjid, built by the Prime Minister Firoz Shah Tughlaq in 1387 AD. Here we had a glimpse of vazu and madarso and mihrab



  1. .Then our walk stopped at the Urs mahal. Our guide Mohd. Umaer explained us the meaning of urs  and how it is performed

  2. Chausath Khamba
  3. It   is a grand marble tomb of Muza Aziz Kokaltash – son of Atgah Khan and Jiji Anga built  in 1623. One look at the monument we can count only 36 pillars unlikely to the name but on asking we came to know that on the side 4 pillars were joined together so it made 64 pillars in total. It has 25 bays, five on each side, each loofed with a dome inside but concrete outside. Aayaats of Quaran ran 
    through the upper walls of the tomb
    Not far from here is the humble tomb of Mirza Ghahib- the 19th century Urdu poet. Mohd. Umaer told us that earlier it was just a marble slab with an inscription on it but the marble structure was built on the grave later. He also narrated a few interesting events of Gahibs lifetime.
        The tomb of Atgah Khan is an example of mughal architecture in white marble and red sandstone inlaid with coloured tiles.tomb has deeply recessed arches with doorway on all 4 sides. Lattice stone screen covers the area between arches.           Last but not the least we visited the Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargah. It has important tombs of Amir Khusrao. Mohd. Shah Rangila and Jahanara Begum.
     The Jama’at Khana Mosque is the oldest structure in the dargah complex. It has 3 bays each topped with the dome, the central being the highest.
     Tomb of Jahanara is an open enclosure and the epitaph reads “let not cover my grave save the grass: for grass will suffice the covering of the grave.”
 Tomb of Amir Khusrao –Amir Khusrao the disciple of Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya has his tomb in the dargah. It has a vaulted roof on 12 pillars with lattice marble screen in between each pillar.
     On our way back we also saw the Baoli built by the Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya in 1321-1322.
On our return we thanked our guide and returned with good knowledge and satisfaction.