Skip to main content
Lot 287*

An Imperial Mughal procession in an extensive landscape
Lucknow, circa 1770

8 April 2014, 10:30 BST
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £62,500 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Islamic and Indian Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

An Imperial Mughal procession in an extensive landscape
Lucknow, circa 1770

pencil, pen and grey ink, gouache and bodycolour, heightened with gold, on paper, borders with scrolling naturalistic floral motifs in blue, white and gold, between two bands of floral motifs in gold on a dark blue ground
529 x 750 mm.

Footnotes

Provenance:
Private collection;
Acquired Simon Ray, 2000;
Christie's, Visions of India, London, 5th October 1999, lot 164.

It is possible that the painting depicts a Mughal army marching into battle with the English, and therefore probably depicts Shah 'Alam II (reg. 1760-88), the first Mughal Emperor to leave Delhi. Another possibility is that the painting depicts the Nawab of Oudh, Shuja-ud-daula (reg. 1754-75). The Emperor, or Nawab, can be seen seated in a splendid howdah of gold on a large elephant with a gold saddle-cloth to the centre foreground of the painting. A second row of elephants behind carry banners and spectacular animal standards, including a fish standard (mahi o maratih, fish and dignities), the Imperial Mughal insignia, with the head made of gold and the body of gold brocade designed to billow in the wind. Amongst the other standards that can be seen are the Lion Standard, the sign of the King, the Hand or Palm Standard, the Round Ball or Orb which represents the sun, and the Scales of Justice, at the extreme right. There is a wealth of anecdotal detail, such as the trumpeters seen in the lower right corner, who have puffed-out cheeks.

Set within a vast landscape that stretches into the far distance in the manner characteristic of Lucknow painting of the period, with an injection of European techniques of recession and aerial perspective. This painting is a rare example of the use of a mixed media technique: the figures are painted in the traditional Indian technique of opaque watercolour on paper, heightened with gold, while the landscape, in particular the receding sky in the upper half of the painting is rendered with English watercolour. Robert Skelton has commented that the smooth curving grey clouds are in the style of Mihr Chand, the leading artist under Shuja-ud-Daula, circa 1750-1760 at Lucknow.

A very similar painting depicting Shah 'Alam in procession, probably a copy with variants of the present painting and also probably by the same hand, is in the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A IS 38 1957). This painting is reversed in mirror fashion relative to the present lot. It is likely that the V & A painting was commissioned as a copy of the present painting by an admirer of the subject and the hand of the artist.

Additional information