Arts of the Islamic World & India including Fine Rugs and Carpets
Arts of the Islamic World & India including Fine Rugs and Carpets
拍卖已结束
March 31, 12:40 PM GMT
估价
40,000 - 60,000 GBP
拍品信息
描述
gouache, ink and gold on paper, 114 pages, miniatures and calligraphies laid down on album pages of stout coloured paper, bound in brown morocco with stamped floral central medallions and cornerpieces, upper doublure with bookplates of Robert Hoe and T. J. Coolidge
page: 29 by 20.6cm.
This important album of seventeenth and eighteenth-century Mughal painting is remarkable among such albums for being still intact as a bound album. It belonged to Robert Hoe III, the American businessman and printing press manufacturer who founded the Grolier Club, the famous New York bibliophilic club established in 1884. His extensive library, including the present album, was sold at auction in New York in 1911 and 1912.
The album has been assembled along traditional Mughal lines, with miniatures opposite miniatures and calligraphies opposite calligraphies, except in a few cases. In terms of the miniatures, similar themes and compositions are placed opposite each other, again reflecting a traditional Mughal approach. For example, a portrait of the Emperor Muhammad Shah is placed opposite one of Nadir Shah, the Persian warlord who vanquished Muhammad Shah and sacked Delhi in 1739. The majority of the paintings are of provincial Mughal origin from the second half of the eighteenth century, with a few late seventeenth or early eighteenth-century examples. A few are later versions of paintings in seventeenth-century royal albums (e.g. a portrait of Mahabat Khan) and many show close stylistic and compositional similarities to other works produced in Oudh and Murshidabad in the period 1760-1790, some of which were commissioned by or bought new by British and other European patrons. This album was probably put together in this context of early European patronage and collecting. Many also show the clear influence of known artists of the period such as Mir Kalan Khan, Mihr Chand and Dip Chand. The binding, although of generic type, is almost identical to the binding of an album of similar date assembled by the artist and East India Company officer James Forbes (1749-1819), now in the Louvre Museum, Paris (see S. Makariou, Un album imperial de peintures mogholes, Paris, 2013, p.27), and these two together perhaps indicate the general format and style of bindings used for albums assembled by or for European patrons at this period.
Two of the miniatures - portraits of Emperor Muhammad Shah and the Persian warlord Nadir Shah - are signed by the Mughal artist Aqil Khan, several of whose works are in the British Library (T. Falk and M. Archer, Indian Miniatures in the India Office Library, London, 1981, nos. 203-6). As well as numerous portraits and many stylised images of women in groups or standing alone (including salabhanjika), several of the miniatures are Ragamala illustrations, while floral studies abound.
Like the paintings, the calligraphies are mostly of eighteenth-century origin, but one is ascribed to the Persian master Imad al-Hasani at Qazwin in 1014/1605, one, in safina form, is probably of late fifteenth or early sixteenth-century Persian origin, and several written on marbled paper may be of seventeenth-century Mughal origin. The other calligraphers represented are as follows: Hafez Shaykh Muhammad, Jawahir Raqam, Muhammad Sadiq bin Jawahir Raqam, Mirza Muhammad ‘Alawi, Pir Muhammad, Bahadur, Muhammad Zahid, Khanazad Faqirullah, Shahyar, ‘Abd al-Rawf, Muhammd Salih Pir Allah.
The album as a whole presents a typical array of later Mughal works and styles and embodies precisely the aesthetic that attracted the majority of early European patrons of Indian painting in the eighteenth century.
The complete list of miniatures and calligraphies is as follows:
1 Floral study
2 A Mughal Prince
3 Jahangir with a prince (perhaps Shah Shuja’)
4-5 Floral studies
6 Gujari Ragini
7 Todi Ragini
8 Calligraphy
9 Floral study
10 A Princess
11 Shah Jahan
12-13 Floral studies
14 Ladies visiting ascetics by a fire in the woods (possibly Devghandar Ragini)
15 A lady with a vina visiting ascetics (possibly Devghandar Ragini)
16-17 Floral studies
18 A lady on a terrace
19 A lady on a terrace
20 Floral study
21 Calligraphic exercise
22 Emperor Muhammad Shah, signed by Aqil Khan
23 Nadir Shah, signed by Aqil Khan
24 Calligraphy, by Hafez Shaykh Ahmad
25 Floral study
26 A courtesan in European costume on a terrace
27 A courtesan on a terrace
28-29 Floral studies
30 A lady reclining on a terrace (possibly Gujari Ragini)
31 A lady talking to a parrot (possibly Sohini Ragini)
32 Calligraphy, by Jawahir Raqam (Jewel-pen)
33 Calligraphy on marbled paper
34 A lady reclining on a terrace listening to musicians (possibly Khamhavati Ragini)
35 A lady holding a flower garland on a terrace at night listening to musicians (possibly Gauri Ragini)
36 Calligraphy, by Muhammad Sadiq bin Jawahir Raqam
37 Calligraphy, by Mirza Muhammad ‘Alawi
38 A lady dancing on a terrace
39 A lady dancing on a terrace
40 Calligraphy, by Pir Muhammad
41 Floral study
42 A standing lady holding a flower
43 A standing lady grasping the branch of a tree (Salabhanjika)
44 Calligraphy on marbled paper
45 Floral study
46 A lady at her toilet in a landscape
47 A lady at her toilet in a landscape
48-49 Floral studies
50 A lady walking by a shrine, an ascetic nearby
51 A lady with companions worshipping at a Siva lingham (possibly Bhairavi Ragini)
52 Calligraphy, by Bahadur
53 Calligraphy, by Bahadur
54 A prince on horseback holding a falcon
55 A prince on horseback (late 17th/early 18th century)
56 Floral study
57 Calligraphy
58 Two ladies by a garden terrace
59 Two ladies by a garden terrace
60 Calligraphy on marbled paper, by Bahadur
61 Calligraphy, by Muhammad Zahid
62 Ladies with musicians in a landscape with deer
63 Ladies with musicians in a landscape with deer
64 Calligraphy, ascribed to ‘Imad al-Hassani, Qazwin, with date 1014/1605
65 Calligraphy, by Khanazad Faqirullah
66 An ascetic visited by female pilgrims (probably a Ragamala scene)
67 A female ascetics visited by a lady
68-69 Floral studies
70 Ladies visiting an ascetic by a fire in the woods (possibly Devghandar Ragini)
71 A lady and companions worshipping at a Siva Lingham
72 Calligraphy, by Bahadur
73 Floral study
74 A prince and a Shaykh in a landscape (17th century)
75 Ladies visiting a holy man in a landscape (17th century with later additions)
76 Floral study
77 Calligraphy, by Shahyar
78 A lady holding a flower
79 A lady holding a vase of flowers
80-81 Floral studies
82 Figures in European costumes by a palace chamber with a ram nearby
83 Figures in European costumes by a palace chamber with a ram nearby
84-85 Floral studies
86 A Mughal nobleman
87 A Lady standing in a landscape
88-89 Floral studies
90-91 Floral studies
92 A Mughal prince
93 Mahabat Khan in a striped Jama, late 17th/early 18th century (a later version of the same portrait in the Late Shah Jahan Album, Chester Beatty Library 07B.33)
94-95 Floral studies
96 A lady on a couch in a landscape
97 Two ladies bathing in a stream
98 Floral study
99 Calligraphy
100 Two ladies in a landscape with a vina and a huqqa
101 Two ladies in a landscape with a vina and a huqqa
102 Calligraphy
103 Calligraphy, signature erased
104 A figure in European costume seated holding a hawk
105 A figure in classical costume on a throne on a terrace
106 Calligraphy, in safina form (probably Persian, late 15th/early 16th century)
107 Calligraphy, by ‘Abd al-Rawf, dated 1175/1761
108 A standing lady grasping the branch of a tree, a deer nearby (Salabhanjika)
109 A lady with companions in a landscape with deer (possibly a version of Todi Ragini)
110 Calligraphy on marbled paper
111 Calligraphy, by Muhammad Salih Pir Allah
112 A kneeling prince, probably Azim al-Shan or Aurangzeb
113 A kneeling prince, probably Farrukhsiyar
114 Floral study