They were the darlings I’d lovingly trained since their apprenticeships; my
three beloved talents: Olive; Butterfly and Stork。
Discussing their talents; mastery and temperaments to the end of finding
the clue we were looking for inevitably led to a discussion of my own life as
well:
The Attributes of Olive
His given name was Velijan。 If he had a nickname besides the one I’d given
him; I don’t know it; because I never saw him sign any of his work。 When he
was an apprentice; he’d e get me from my home on Tuesday mornings。 He
was very proud; and so if he ever lowered himself to sign his work; he’d want
this signature to be plain and recognizable; he wouldn’t try to conceal it
anywhere。 Allah had quite generously endowed him with excess ability。 He
could readily and easily do anything from gilding to ruling and his work was
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superb。 He was the workshop’s most brilliant creator of trees; animals and the
human face。 Velijan’s father; who brought him to Istanbul when he was; I
believe; ten years old; was trained by Siyavush; the famous illustrator
specializing in faces in the Persian Shah’s Tabriz workshop。 He hails from a
long line of masters whose genealogy goes back to the Mongols; and just like
the elderly masters who bore a Mongol…Chinese influence and settled in
Samarkand; Bukhara and Herat 150 years ago; he rendered moon…faced young
lovers as if they were Chinese。 Neither during his apprenticeship nor during
his time as a master was I able to lead this stubborn artist to other styles。 How
I would’ve liked him to transcend the styles and models of the Mongol;
Chinese and Herat masters billeted deep in his soul; or even for him to forget
about them entirely。 When I told him this; he replied that like many
miniaturists who’d moved from workshop to workshop and country to
country; he’d forgotten these old styles; if he’d ever actually learned them。
Though the value of many miniaturists resides precisely in the splendid models
of form they’ve mitted to memory; had Velijan truly forgotten them; he’d
have bee an even greater illustrator。 Still; there were two benefits; of which
he wasn’t even aware; to harboring the teachings of his mentors in the depths
of his soul like a pair of unconfessed sins: 1。 For such a gifted miniaturist;
clinging to old forms inevitably stirred feelings of guilt and alienation that
would spur his talent to maturity。 2。 In a moment of difficulty; he could
always recall what he claimed to have forgotten; and thus; he could
successfully plete any new subject; history or scene by recourse to one of