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	      <title>The Painted Desert</title>
		  <desciption><![CDATA[<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><font size="2"><strong><em>A  narrow strip of road leads four hours northward from Jaipur, through the  desert to the land of Shekhavati, to extraordinary frescoed mansions in  the sand.</em></strong></font>&nbsp; </font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><img height="250" width="201" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue1/The_Painted_Desert_1.jpg" />The historical romance of the  maharajas and unparalleled colors of their culture draw countless  travelers from more prosaic lands to the Indian state of Rajasthan. In  the capital of Jaipur they pass their few days very rewardingly: looking  over exquisite palaces such as the Hawa Mahal, taking an elephant ride  to Amber Fort and shopping for splendid crafts and sparkling gemstones.  It takes little more than a cursory glance around to see there is  nothing but desert on every side. </font><br />
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<font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">Once upon a time, the now  seemingly remote Shekhavati lay along the southern Silk Road.  Innumerable heavily-burdened camels plodded this transit region with  trade goods bound between the ports of Gujurat and the inland city of  Delhi, stopping at the caravanserais along the way&mdash;in Fatehpur,  Jhunjhunu, Lakshmangarh, Mandawa... </font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">Much has been written of the  heroic Rajput warriors who battled and loved their way across this  landscape for centuries. Far less is heard of the prosperous merchants  who, in fact, financially enabled their adventures in return for  protection and privilege. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><img height="160" width="180" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue1/The_Painted_Desert_2.jpg" />Those affluent Shekhavati  traders compensated their large families for the extended absences due  to the necessities of business by building enormous, comfortable  mansions for them. At the same time, of course, they were tacitly  proclaiming and monumentalizing their own status in the eyes of the  townspeople and were socially obligated to contribute additional  building projects to the public good. </font><br />
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<font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><font face="arial, helvetica,
sans-serif">Living as they did in this stark desert land nearly devoid  of natural colors, perhaps it is not surprising they found a unique way  to bring color and beauty into their lives. India&rsquo;s earlier tradition of  Mughal court painting was given a new interpretation here as mansion  owners began to commission craftsmen to decorate the walls of their  buildings. The painting technique was similar to that of the Italian  fresco. A wet lime plaster surface acted as an adhesive for the colors,  with additional beating and burnishing to drive the natural pigments  into the plaster. The folk painters often depicted Hindu religious  themes, as well as scenes of every-day life among Shekhavati&rsquo;s upper  class. Portraits of notable people and pictorialized local legends were  popular subjects. Over and over again, the camel and elephant strode  across the plaster walls, just as they did in the streets of Shekhavati.  </font></font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><font face="arial, helvetica,
sans-serif">As the British began to dominate Indian commerce in the 19th  century, the Gujurat ports lost business to Calcutta (Kolkata), Bombay  (Mumbai) and Madras (Chennai), while on overland routes trains were  beginning to replace camels. Shekhavati&rsquo;s astute businessmen relocated  to the British centers of commerce, heading off alone to the great port  cities, leaving their families behind in their havelis, as those  once-vibrant towns began to fall quiet. </font></font><br />
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<font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><font face="arial, helvetica,
sans-serif">A number of those wealthy traders in their new circumstances  eventually succeeded to amass even greater fortunes than before,  enabling them to add to the opulence of their hometown havelis. <br />
</font></font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><font face="arial, helvetica,
sans-serif"><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue1/The_Painted_Desert_3.jpg" />The word haveli is of Persian origin, meaning a surrounded  or enclosed space. A haveli was built around one or more spacious  courtyards and was three-to-five stories high. The form of the structure  defined the way of life, for in Shekhavati a woman&rsquo;s world was limited  almost totally by the walls of her own home. How much more fortunate  were the women whose walls were filled with beauty! </font></font><br />
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<font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">Many aspects of the British  colonial way of life astounded the Indian people. As word of their  remarkably different customs, inventions and eccentricities spread to  these faraway towns, painters began to incorporate some of them into  their frescoes. Soon automobiles were more popular subjects than  elephants.</font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">An English lord and lady,  stuffed into their impractical woolen clothes in this hot land, strutted  along with their pet dog on a leash. Strangely imagined trains, drawn  not from sight but from hearsay, appeared on walls. Images of airplanes,  telephones and phonographs amazed passers-by who had never seen and  would never actually see the real thing. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">Today life goes on in its  quiet and unassuming way in the forgotten villages of Shekhavati. Along  mostly unpaved streets, those decorative havelis still stand here and  there. They are taken as much for granted as the endless desert sand  with which they are surrounded. Many of the families eventually left  them behind, joining their patriarch in their city homes, so today some  of the havelis in Shekhavati remain locked, while others are tended by  caretakers or let to tenant families. The faraway owners rarely have  cause to return and, unfortunately, even less cause to invest in the  upkeep of these old buildings. Preservation of cultural heritage is  perhaps too vague a notion to appreciate and probably too costly to  consider. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><img height="160" width="235" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue1/The_Painted_Desert_4.jpg" /><img height="160" width="253" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue1/The_Painted_Desert_5.jpg" /></font></p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">The relentless sun, wind and  sand also seem to conspire against preservation so, season by season,  these painted wallscapes pale and crumble. Could it be a decade more,  maybe two or three, until many of them silently vanish, as though they  had never been? <br />
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	      <author><![CDATA[Charlotte Anderson & Gorazd Vilhar]]></author>
	      <pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 07:09:10 +0000</pubDate>
	      <link>http://www.outdoorjapan.com/magazine/story_rss/62</link>
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