All along the land route from
Persia to India-via Isfahan, Samarkhand, Kabul and
Peshawar - the Islamic invaders left their
trail: the Royal Mosque at Isfahan, the
Gur-i-mir at Samarkhand, the Fort in Lahore and Chini ka Rauza
in Agra stand till today, symbols of one of the world's most enduring
cultures. All these monuments have a striking similarity - the
profuse and intricate use of brilliant turquoise
tiles. In time
the colour came to be generally known as 'Persian Blue'.
The conquering kings traveled with their entourage of artisans
and craftsmen, a group of whom settled down in the village of Khurja,
100 kilometres from Delhi, where the tradition was handed down
from father to son.
Then came the British in the early 17th
century. Having taken the sea route, they
failed to observe the progression of 'Persian blue'
from Central Asia to India, and they promptly christened the blue
pottery they saw 'Delhi
Blue', a name
that has remained till today. 'Delhi Blue'
was begun many years ago - as far back as 1952, by Gurcharan
Singh. In the early 1920s
when Gurcharan Singh was in Japan he decided
that commercial pottery was not for him; he opted instead for studio
pottery.For three years after his return to India, Gurcharan was
under the patronage of the Maharaja of Bundi,
who financed his work and encouraged his search for a particular
type of clay he needed. For a while he joined the Punjab government
as its ceramics expert and it was only in 1952 that Gurcharan Singh
began his own production unit
in Delhi.
Khurja by that time had been forced into producing cheap, easily
marketable items, and the famous blue pottery had been more or
less eliminated except for the occasional piece. There was thus
the danger of the blue glaze formula, a secret
transmitted from father to son, dying out completely. Gurcharan Singh brought Abdullah,
one of the direct descendants of the original
emigrants, to Delhi
along with a couple of others. The showroom of the pottery had
a beautifully arched ceiling, full of pots of all shapes and sizes
clad in amazing glazes concocted by that wizard of glazing - Sardar
Gurcharan Singh. About 40 per cent of what
was produced at that time were tableware, for which there was a constant demand. Along
with the pottery, Delhi Blue produced the most exquisite stoneware
tiles and jaalis.
The ceramic tiles of splendid geometric
design covered the floors of nearly all
the rooms; these had been made in the factory
of Sardar
Ram Singh Kabli. Outside, under the
majestic neem trees Gurcharan Singh and
his son Mansimran taught
students young and old, from children to
diplomats in a laid-back and peaceful manner.
Delhi Blue Art Pottery became the best-known centre for studio
potters in India. In 1986 unfortunately, the Government acquired
the land surrounding the pottery, and the kilns had to be shut
down.
It was a piece of Delhi that should never have been lost.
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