The earliest Mughal Indian miniatures date to the 16th century. They were inspired by those painted at the refined Moslem courts of the neighboring Persian empire. They incorporated figures in spite of the Moslem faith’s proscription against depicting the human form. Such was the nature of sophisticated courtly life everywhere that beauty and pleasure trumped systems of morality. This was no less the case at the provincial Indian courts, where our miniature, marked by a charming pictorial naiveté, was most likely painted. Yet the artist was undeniably accomplished. His command of perspective, introduced by Jesuit missionaries in the 17th century, is seen in the landscape, which rolls back to a distant horizon, contrary to the flat two-dimensional ones following Indian-painting traditions. And if Mughal artists were influenced by Western art, the compliment was returned by Rembrandt and Sir Joshua Reynolds, among others, who collected Indian miniatures (as did, perhaps, Giovanni Bellini who painted in Mughal style the famous miniature of a Persian man that’s now in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston).
Centuries later, the celebrated Vietnamese painter Le-Pho, who settled in Paris in the 1930s, acquired our miniature and had it framed. He eventually gave it to his son Pierre Le-Tan, a painter himself, and a voracious collector.
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Dimensions:Height: 10.75 in (27.31 cm)Width: 8 in (20.32 cm)Depth: 1 in (2.54 cm)
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Style:Anglo-Indian(Of the Period)
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Materials and Techniques:PaperPainted
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Place of Origin:India
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Period:18th Century
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Date of Manufacture:circa 1750
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Condition:GoodWear consistent with age and use. Some old water staining in image.
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Seller Location:New York, NY
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Reference Number:Seller: LU1061426233542
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