Huqqa thumbnail 1
Not on display

Huqqa

first half 18th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This base of a water pipe (huqqa) was made in India in the first half of the 18th century and belongs to a class of metalwares known as "bidri". Bidri is a technique known only in the Indian subcontinent, and takes its name from the city of Bidar, in the present-day state of Karnatika, where it is thought to have originated. Surviving pieces date from the late 16th or early 17th century, and it is still being made today. Bidri objects are cast from an alloy in which zinc predominates, though small amounts of lead, copper and tin may also be found. The decoration may be inlaid with silver, as here, or silver and brass, or overlaid with silver wires hammered onto a cross-hatched surface. The final stage of the process is to apply a saline mud paste over the entire surface which changes the dull grey of the alloy to a matt black without affecting the decoration. The exact chemical process which takes place is still unidentified. After removal of the mud paste, the surface of the piece would be rubbed with oil.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Bell shaped Huqqa base inlaid with silver, Deccan, 1750-1800
Physical description
Bell shaped vessel with a broad central frieze on the body inlaid with silver wire in peacock feather motifs. A water motif is used as a border on the moulding encircling the base, on teh shoulders and on the projecting rim encircling the middle of the neck, in all cased framed by narrow borders of rectangles between horizontal wire inlays.
Dimensions
  • Height: 16.8cm
  • Diameter: 15.8cm
Object history
A 'huqqa' is a smoking device that consists of a small container for tobacco leaves mounted on a base. The base is filled with water and the smoke is drawn through the water, and along a tube .
Historical context
Bought from Mr F. S. Fletcher in 1976
Subject depicted
Summary
This base of a water pipe (huqqa) was made in India in the first half of the 18th century and belongs to a class of metalwares known as "bidri". Bidri is a technique known only in the Indian subcontinent, and takes its name from the city of Bidar, in the present-day state of Karnatika, where it is thought to have originated. Surviving pieces date from the late 16th or early 17th century, and it is still being made today. Bidri objects are cast from an alloy in which zinc predominates, though small amounts of lead, copper and tin may also be found. The decoration may be inlaid with silver, as here, or silver and brass, or overlaid with silver wires hammered onto a cross-hatched surface. The final stage of the process is to apply a saline mud paste over the entire surface which changes the dull grey of the alloy to a matt black without affecting the decoration. The exact chemical process which takes place is still unidentified. After removal of the mud paste, the surface of the piece would be rubbed with oil.
Bibliographic references
  • Susan Stronge, Bidri Ware. Inlaid Metalwork from India, Victoria and Albert Museum, 1985, cat. 12, p. 50 (illustrated p. 51)
  • Susan Stronge, in The Indian Heritage. Court Life and Arts under Mughal Rule, V&A, 1982, cat. 475, p.141, ISBN 0906969263.
  • Skelton, Robert, et al, The Indian Heritage. Court life and Arts under Mughal Rule London: The Victoria and Albert Museum, 1982 p. 141, cat. no. 475
Collection
Accession number
IS.39-1976

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Record createdSeptember 12, 2002
Record URL
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