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simply join the book…arts workshop of the victorious khan; instead he headed
out on campaign with him; claiming that he wanted to embellish the khan’s
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History with scenes of war he’d witnessed himself。 So this great master; who
for sixty…two years had made pictures of horses; cavalry charges and battles
without ever having seen a battle; went to war for the first time。 But before he
could even see the thunderous and violent clash of sweating horses; he lost his
hands and his eyesight to enemy cannon…fire。 The old master; like all genuine
virtuosos; had in any case been awaiting blindness as though it were Allah’s
blessing; and neither did he treat the loss of his hands as a great deficiency。 He
maintained that the memory of a miniaturist was located not in the hand; as
some insisted; but in the intellect and the heart; and furthermore; now that he
was blind; he declared that he could see the true pictures; scenery and essential
and flawless horses that Allah manded be seen。 To share these wonders
with lovers of art; he hired a tall; pale…skinned; pink…plected; green…eyed
calligrapher’s apprentice to whom he dictated exactly how to draw the
marvelous horses that appeared to him in God’s divine darkness—as he
would’ve drawn them had he been able to hold a brush in his hands。 After the
master’s death; his account of how to draw 303 horses beginning from the left
foreleg was collected by the handsome calligrapher’s apprentice into three
volumes respectively entitled The Depiction of Horses; The Flow of Horses and The
Love of Horses; which were quite widely liked and sought after for a time in the
regions where the Whitesheep ruled。 Though they appeared in a variety of new
editions and copies; were memorized by illustrators; apprentices and their
students and were used as practice books; after Tall Hasan’s Whitesheep
nation was obliterated and the Herat style of illustration overtook all of Persia;
Jemalettin and his manuscripts were forgotten。 Doubtless; the logic behind
Kemalettin R?za of Herat’s violent criticism of these three volumes in his book
The Blindman’s Horses; and his conclusion that they ought to be burned; had
figured in this turn of events。 Kemalettin R?za claimed that none of the horses
described by Jemalettin of Kazvin in his three volumes could be a horse of
God’s vision—because none of them were “immaculate;” since the old master
had described them after he’d witnessed an actual battle scene; no matter
how briefly。 Since the treasures of Tall Hasan of the Whitesheep had been
plundered by Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror and brought to Istanbul; it
should e as no surprise that occasionally certain of these 303 stories
appear in other manuscripts in Istanbul and even that some horses are drawn
as instructed therein。
310
LAM
In Herat and Shiraz; when a master miniaturist nearing the end of his days
went blind from a lifetime of excessive labor; it would not only be taken as a
sign of that master’s determination; but would be mended as God’s
acknowledgment of the great master’s work and talent。 There was even a time
in Herat when masters who hadn’t gone blind despite having grown old were
regarded with suspicion; a situation that pelled quite a few of them to
actually induce blindness in their old age。 There was a long period during
which men reverently recalled artists who blinded themselves; following in the
path of those legendary masters who’d done so rather than work for another
monarch or change their styles。 And it was during this age that Abu Said;
Tamerlane’s grandson from the Miran Shah line of descent; introduced a
further twist in his workshop after he’d conquered Tashkent and Samarkand:
The practice of paying greater homage to the imitation of blindness than to
blindness itself。 Black Veli; the old artisan who inspired Abu Said; had
confirmed that a blind miniaturist could see the horses of God’s vision from
within the darkness; however; true talent resided in a sighted miniaturist who
could regard the world like a blind man。 At the age of sixty…seven he proved his
point by dashing off a horse that came to the tip of his brush without so
much as a glance at the paper; even as his eyes remained all the while open
and fixed on the page。 At the end of this artistic ceremony for which Miran
Shah had deaf musicians play lutes and mute storytellers recite stories to
support the legendary master’s efforts; the splendid horse that Black Veli had
drawn was pared at length with other horses he’d made: There was no
difference whatsoever among them; much to Miran Shah’s irritation;
thereafter; the legendary master declared that a miniaturist possessed of
talent; regardless of whether his eyes are open or closed; will always and only
see horses in one way; that is; the way that Allah perceives them。 And among
great master miniaturists; there is no difference between the blind and the
sighted: The hand would always draw the same horse because there was as yet
no such thing as the Frankish innovation called “style。” The horses made by
the great master Black Veli have been imitated by all Muslim miniaturists for
110 years。 As for Black Veli himself; after the defeat of Abu Said and the
dispersal of his workshop; he moved from Samarkand to Kazvin; where two
years later he was condemned for his spiteful attempts to refute the verse in
the Glorious Koran that declares; “The blind and the seeing are not equal。” For
this; he was first blinded; then killed by young Nizam Shah’s soldiers。
311
I was on the verge of telling a third story; describing to the pretty…eyed
calligrapher’s apprentice how the great master Bihzad