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Graduate Level intermediate Indian Paintings Classical Music Mughal Art Carnatic Music Hindustani Music
Indian Painting Schools and Classical Music — Mughal, Rajput, Hindustani, Carnatic
Study notes on Indian painting schools (Mughal, Rajput, Pahari, Miniature) and classical music (Hindustani vs Carnatic, ragas, instruments) for Kerala PSC.
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— Study notes on Indian painting schools (Mughal, Rajput, Pahari, Miniature) and classical music (Hindustani vs Carnatic, ragas, instruments) for Kerala PSC.
#Indian Paintings
#Classical Music
#Mughal Art
#Carnatic Music
#Hindustani Music
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Indian art and music are regularly tested in Kerala PSC general knowledge sections. Key areas include painting schools, their patrons, and classical music traditions. Expect 1-3 questions per paper.
Indian Painting — Major Schools
1. Mughal School of Painting
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Period | 16th-19th century |
| Founder | Humayun brought Persian painters Mir Sayyid Ali and Abdus Samad from Persia |
| Peak | Under Akbar and Jahangir |
| Style | Realistic, detailed, vivid colors, Persian influence blended with Indian traditions |
| Subjects | Court scenes, portraits, hunting, battles, nature, historical events |
| Key feature | Individual portraiture reached perfection under Jahangir |
| Ruler | Contribution to Painting |
|---|---|
| Humayun | Brought Persian artists; founded the school |
| Akbar | Established formal workshop (Kitabkhana); commissioned Hamzanama (1400 illustrations), Razmnama (Persian Mahabharata) |
| Jahangir | Greatest patron; excelled in naturalist painting (birds, flowers, animals); said he could identify painter by style; Mansur (“Nadir-ul-Asr” — Wonder of the Age) was his court painter |
| Shah Jahan | More formal and decorative; marble inlay work (Pietra Dura) emphasis |
| Aurangzeb | Declined due to his orthodox views; painters migrated to Rajput courts |
Famous Mughal Painters
| Painter | Known For |
|---|---|
| Abdus Samad | Persian master brought by Humayun; teacher |
| Daswanth | Hindu painter in Akbar’s court; illustrated Razmnama |
| Basawan | Master of composition; Akbar’s court |
| Mansur (Ustad Mansur) | Naturalist paintings; Jahangir gave him title “Nadir-ul-Asr” |
| Abu’l Hasan | Title “Nadir-uz-Zaman” from Jahangir |
| Bichitr | Painted famous Jahangir Preferring a Sufi Saint painting |
2. Rajput School of Painting
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Period | 16th-19th century |
| Region | Rajasthan courts (Mewar, Marwar, Bundi, Kishangarh, Jaipur) |
| Style | Bold colors, flat perspective, stylized figures, emotional and devotional themes |
| Subjects | Krishna Leela, Ragamala (musical modes illustrated), court scenes, love themes |
| Distinction from Mughal | More romantic and religious; less realistic; vibrant primary colors |
| Sub-school | Region | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Mewar | Udaipur | Oldest Rajput school; bold, flat style |
| Bundi-Kota | Bundi/Kota | Lush nature scenes; hunting themes |
| Kishangarh | Kishangarh | Famous for Bani Thani painting (Indian Mona Lisa) by Nihal Chand |
| Marwar | Jodhpur | Court and equestrian paintings |
| Jaipur | Jaipur | Influenced by Mughal realism |
3. Pahari School of Painting
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Period | 17th-19th century |
| Region | Hill states of Himachal Pradesh and J&K (Basohli, Kangra, Guler, Chamba) |
| Origin | Mughal painters migrated to hill courts after Aurangzeb’s reign |
| Style | Lyrical, delicate, naturalistic landscapes, romantic themes |
| Subjects | Radha-Krishna love, Nayika-Nayaka (lover classifications), Ragamala, Gita Govinda |
| Sub-school | Key Feature |
|---|---|
| Basohli | Bold, intense colors; earliest Pahari style; geometric faces |
| Kangra | Most refined Pahari school; soft, lyrical; landscapes with Radha-Krishna; peak under Raja Sansar Chand |
| Guler | Transitional between Basohli and Kangra; naturalistic |
| Chamba | Rumal (handkerchief) paintings — embroidered textiles |
4. Other Important Schools
| School | Region | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Deccan School | Golconda, Bijapur, Ahmednagar | Blend of Persian, Turkish, Indian; rich gold use; night scenes |
| Bengal School | Bengal (early 20th century) | Founded by Abanindranath Tagore; reaction against Western art; nationalist art movement; famous painting: Bharat Mata |
| Tanjore (Thanjavur) Painting | Tamil Nadu | Rich colors, gold foil, semi-precious stones; religious (Hindu gods); originated under Nayak rulers |
| Kerala Mural Painting | Kerala | Temple walls; vibrant natural pigments; Mattancherry Palace, Padmanabhapuram Palace; Krishnapuram Palace — Gajendra Moksham (largest single mural) |
| Madhubani (Mithila) Painting | Bihar | Folk art; geometric patterns, nature motifs; natural dyes; GI tag |
| Warli Painting | Maharashtra | Tribal art; white on mud-brown background; geometric human figures |
| Pattachitra | Odisha/West Bengal | Cloth-based scroll painting; mythological themes |
| Kalamkari | Andhra Pradesh (Srikalahasti, Machilipatnam) | Hand-painted or block-printed cotton textile; natural dyes |
| Pichwai | Rajasthan (Nathdwara) | Large cloth paintings behind Krishna idol; devotional |
Indian Classical Music
Two Systems
| Feature | Hindustani Music | Carnatic Music |
|---|---|---|
| Region | North India | South India |
| Origin | Both derive from Sama Veda; diverged around 13th century | |
| Influence | Persian and Arabic influence (Mughal period) | More indigenous; less external influence |
| Raga system | Ragas grouped into Thaats (10 Thaats by V.N. Bhatkhande) | Ragas grouped into Melakartas (72 Melakarta ragas) |
| Improvisation | Greater emphasis on improvisation (alap) | More composition-based with set structures |
| Tempo | Vilambit (slow), Madhya (medium), Drut (fast) | Vilamba, Madhyama, Druta |
| Main vocal forms | Dhrupad, Khayal, Thumri, Ghazal | Kriti, Varnam, Padam, Tillana |
| Key instruments | Sitar, Sarod, Tabla, Santoor, Sarangi, Shehnai | Veena, Mridangam, Violin, Ghatam, Nadaswaram |
10 Thaats (Hindustani Music)
| Thaat | Equivalent Melakarta (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Bilawal | Shankarabharanam (equivalent of Western major scale) |
| Khamaj | Harikambhoji |
| Kafi | Kharaharapriya |
| Asavari | Natabhairavi |
| Bhairavi | Hanumathodi |
| Bhairav | Mayamalavagowla |
| Kalyan | Mechakalyani |
| Marwa | Gamanashrama |
| Poorvi | Kamavardhini |
| Todi | Shubhapantuvarali |
Carnatic Music Trinity (Sangita Ratnatraya)
| Composer | Period | Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Tyagaraja | 1767-1847 | Greatest Carnatic composer; composed in Telugu; over 700 kritis; Pancharatna Kritis (five gems) |
| Muthuswami Dikshitar | 1775-1835 | Composed in Sanskrit; influenced by Hindustani music; known for kritis on temple deities |
| Syama Sastri | 1762-1827 | Smallest output but of highest quality; composed in Telugu |
Hindustani Music — Important Figures
| Musician | Contribution |
|---|---|
| Amir Khusrau (13th century) | Credited with developing Qawwali, Tarana, and the Sitar; Khayal form; blended Persian-Indian music |
| Tansen | One of the Navaratnas of Akbar’s court; Dhrupad master; legends of Raga Deepak and Raga Megh Malhar |
| Swami Haridas | Guru of Tansen; devotional music |
| V.N. Bhatkhande (1860-1936) | Musicologist; classified Hindustani ragas into 10 Thaats; wrote Hindustani Sangit Paddhati |
| V.D. Paluskar (1872-1931) | Founded Gandharva Mahavidyalaya; popularized classical music |
Kerala’s Musical Heritage
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Tradition | Kerala follows the Carnatic music system |
| Swathi Thirunal | Maharaja of Travancore (1813-1846); composed over 400 songs in multiple ragas and languages (Sanskrit, Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada, Hindi); annual Swathi Sangeethotsavam at Kuthiramalika |
| Sopanam music | Temple music unique to Kerala; slow, devotional; accompanies Kathakali and temple rituals |
| Thullal | Musical art form by Kunchan Nambiar (18th century) |
| Chenda melam | Percussion ensemble (Panchavadyam, Panchari, Thayambaka) |
Important Musical Instruments
| Instrument | Type | Region | Key Facts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sitar | String | North | Popularized by Ravi Shankar; believed to be developed from Veena by Amir Khusrau |
| Sarod | String | North | Fretless; Amjad Ali Khan is a famous player |
| Tabla | Percussion | North | Pair of drums; attributed to Amir Khusrau |
| Shehnai | Wind | North | Double-reed; Bismillah Khan was the maestro |
| Santoor | String | North (Kashmir) | Trapezoid; Shiv Kumar Sharma popularized it |
| Sarangi | String (bowed) | North | ”Instrument of a hundred colors” |
| Veena (Saraswati Veena) | String | South | National instrument mentioned in ancient texts |
| Mridangam | Percussion | South | Primary rhythm instrument in Carnatic music |
| Nadaswaram | Wind | South | Double-reed; considered auspicious; temple instrument |
| Ghatam | Percussion | South | Clay pot; accompaniment in Carnatic music |
| Chenda | Percussion | Kerala | Cylindrical drum; temple festivals |
| Edakka | Percussion | Kerala | Hourglass drum; Sopanam music |
| Idakka | Percussion | Kerala | Same as Edakka |
PSC Quick Recall
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Bani Thani painting belongs to | Kishangarh school (painter: Nihal Chand) |
| Bharat Mata painting by | Abanindranath Tagore (Bengal School) |
| Nadir-ul-Asr title given to | Ustad Mansur (by Jahangir) |
| Gajendra Moksham mural is at | Krishnapuram Palace, Alappuzha |
| Carnatic Music Trinity | Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar, Syama Sastri |
| 10 Thaats system by | V.N. Bhatkhande |
| 72 Melakarta system belongs to | Carnatic music |
| Swathi Thirunal was Maharaja of | Travancore |
| Tansen was in whose court? | Akbar |
| Amir Khusrau is credited with | Qawwali, Sitar, Khayal form |
| Bismillah Khan played | Shehnai |
| Madhubani painting is from | Bihar (Mithila region) |
| Tanjore painting uses | Gold foil and semi-precious stones |
| Sopanam music is unique to | Kerala (temple music) |
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