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A double-sided page depicting a Persian nobleman wearing an elaborate late Safavid turban, from a dispersed album of Deccani rulers and noblemen Deccan, Golconda, circa 1680 image 1
A double-sided page depicting a Persian nobleman wearing an elaborate late Safavid turban, from a dispersed album of Deccani rulers and noblemen Deccan, Golconda, circa 1680 image 2
Lot 282

A double-sided page depicting a Persian nobleman wearing an elaborate late Safavid turban, from a dispersed album of Deccani rulers and noblemen
Deccan, Golconda, circa 1680

25 October 2021, 11:00 BST
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £3,825 inc. premium

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A double-sided page depicting a Persian nobleman wearing an elaborate late Safavid turban, from a dispersed album of Deccani rulers and noblemen
Deccan, Golconda, circa 1680

gouache and gold on paper, laid down on an album page with gilt-decorated floral borders, numbered 62 or 68 at top; verso, Gujari ragini, depicting a female musician seated in a palace garden, Deccan, late 17th-18th Century, with a single line of Persian text in nasta'liq above and below, inner and outer gilt-decorated floral borders, the page laid down on a later separate sheet
paintings 197 x 118 mm., 160 x 117 mm.; album page 335 x 215 mm.

Footnotes

Another folio from this album, with the same illuminated borders, is in the British Museum (1920,0917,0.69), dated to the early 18th Century. Zebrowski observes that 'it was the custom at Golconda for painters of modest talent to produce albums of Deccani and Mughal notables for sale in the bazaar to European and other foreign travellers' (M. Zebrowski, Deccani Painting, London 1983, p. 194). We might also compare in connection with both our painting and the British Museum example, two folios in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (M. 81.8.9, and M. 87.20.1), of circa 1690: the first a Mughal-influenced portrait with the same light green background and flowers at the subject's feet; and an oval portrait in the same style and that of the British Museum. (See P. Pal, Indian Painting: a catalogue of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Collection, Los Angeles 1993, vol. I, pp. 348-351, nos. 110 and 111.

The nasta'liq script verso is a demonstration of how to join letters of the alphabet to others, and is not related to the painting.

Additional information