
If the Taj Mahal at night now belongs to tourists, at dawn it answers to only regulars. On November 27, 2004, as Shah Jahan8217;s white monument opened it doors to visitors on moonlit nights 8212; after a gap of 20 years 8212; it was taken over by tourists and security staff. With all shops closing by 7.30 pm and no one being permitted to move around in its vicinity after that, the midnight hour belonged to the visitors. It was their prerogative, nay privilege, to see Agra8217;s once and forever wonder in its shimmering moonlit glory.
Gupta takes you through a side gate to the back of the monument, where it8217;s a silvery silhouette before a misty Yamuna. 8216;8216;You know,8217;8217; he tells you, making his way on the slushy slippery banks with practised ease, 8216;8216;the best place to see the Taj is from behind or across the river. Then you can8217;t see its red sandstone boundary. Only the white Taj shines in the moonlight looking as if it were suspended in the air.8217;8217;
This is what he has been doing for 35 years, he says, ever since he gave up his salesman8217;s job to become a resident devotee at every romantic8217;s ultimate shrine.
THE Dauji temple at the Dasehra Ghat slowly hums out its morning mantras. A couple hesitatingly take a dip in the cold river water. 8216;8216;The boatman will be here too soon,8217;8217; says Gupta. Almost on cue he appears. Manoj the boatman is almost unconcerned that he has such an exotic workplace. Singing Hindi film songs full-throatedly he begins another day of rowing people from shore to shore, making his way below the flying cormorants, those symbols of insatiable hunger.
The hopping birds on the banks now have company. A community of squatters who have the dubious honour of turning the riverbank into their open-air, Taj-facing loos.
A man walks his camel across the sand with his two sons. 8216;8216;Not this early at least,8217;8217; he protests, clearly not happy at being photographed at this private hour before he begins his day8217;s work. A puddle throws up the reflection of the camel. Another shows the Mehtab Bagh or the Moonlight Garden across the Yamuna.
Once upon a time a pool in the garden was said to reflect the Taj on full moon nights. But that was a long time ago. Today, the Bagh looks on silently at life in the shadow of the tomb. It looks on as day breaks again at the Taj.
8216;The Taj is so feminine, so delicate8217;
This week, Agra hosted the winners of the Aga Khan Architecture Award. They told why the Taj was still the template for Islamic architecture
This year the Aga Khan Award for Architecture 8212; with a triennial prize fund of 500,000, it8217;s the world8217;s most valuable such award 8212; chose seven projects, of which almost all were contemporary constructions in the Muslim world. Some were chosen as symbols of modernity, some for their social impact.
The Taj represents few of these qualities 8212; it8217;s a symbol from the past, with little utility value. Nevertheless, its appeal is absolute. Why? And where does it stand in the pantheon of Islamic architecture, medieval and modern? The Sunday Express tried finding answers at a seminar hosted by the Aga Khan Foundation on November 29, 2004. Fittingly, the seminar took place in Agra, in the very week when the Taj threw off its veil on moonlight nights.
The seminarists spoke in different voices on Islamic architecture in the modern world. If they were near unanimous, it was in their choice of the Taj as an enduring aesthetic symbol. Here is what they said, about the object of their pilgrimage and how it informed their work.
CRAIG DYKERS
Bibliotheca Alexandrina, Egypt
His Oslo-based firm8217;s creation, the Bibliotheca in Egypt has provoked much discussion as a contemporary take at the site of one of the ancient world8217;s greatest libraries. 8216;8216;It8217;s important to be humble but also to be strong. You have to take a step back into history but you also have to have a vision for the future.8217;8217;
But a contemporary intervention, such as I.M. Pei8217;s glass pyramid at the entrance of the Louvre, is unthinkable for him in the context of the Taj. 8216;8216;This tomb is about death but also life.8217;8217; For him 8216;8216;it8217;s the most feminine and delicate8217;8217; of Islamic monuments, yet exudes power and strength.
It also has little utility value, unlike, say, the Bibliotheca at Alexandria. 8216;8216;The most useless things are usually the most beautiful. The Taj has no mechanical function but it has the function of the mind,8217;8217; signs off Dykers, with the sort of logic that would seem reasonable only to an architect.
CESAR PELLI
Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur
But for Pelli, the Taj Mahal is the monument against which all others will be judged. When he finally saw it this week his belief was reinforced. 8216;8216;Its primary use is not as a template. It establishes an element of quality. It tells architects that within the Islamic tradition you can do a masterpiece like the Taj. It reassures us that it is possible.8217;8217;
There are less dramatic but equally important secondary lessons 8212; how the stones are used, and decorations are engraved on stone walls. For Pelli, the elegance of the Taj lies in its subtlety. 8216;8216;The curve of the dome is so subtle. Architects today would have said, 8216;Let8217;s make it fatter so no one misses the point8217;. But the Taj8217;s dome shows incredible restraint,8217;8217; says Pelli, who counts Istanbul8217;s Blue Mosque as perhaps a comparable masterpiece of Islamic architecture.
DIEBEDO FRANCIS KERE
Primary School, Gando, Burkina Faso
Kere, the first in his village to receive higher education 8212; he studied architecture at Berlin, where he now teaches 8212; is happy to have made a difference, however small. He has, in fact, always felt more comfortable with smaller buildings and mosques.
THE Taj, of course is different: 8216;8216;Nothing compares with it. It shows us that love is possible.8217;8217; Studying in Berlin, Kere had seen photographs of the Taj at Indian restaurants. But not one had prepared him for the real thing. 8216;8216;Its symmetry is perfect,8217;8217; he says, almost gushes, 8216;8216;when I saw it, I didn8217;t take photographs. I thought my camera was not up to it.8217;8217;
For Kere, the garden at the Taj is a perfect setting, one he says he has not seen anywhere else.