A GREY-HEADED MYNA ON A PIGEON PEA BRANCH
A GREY-HEADED MYNA ON A PIGEON PEA BRANCH
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A GREY-HEADED MYNA ON A PIGEON PEA BRANCH

BY ZAYN AL-DIN OR A CLOSE ASSOCIATE, CALCUTTA, EAST INDIA, CIRCA 1775

Details
A GREY-HEADED MYNA ON A PIGEON PEA BRANCH
BY ZAYN AL-DIN OR A CLOSE ASSOCIATE, CALCUTTA, EAST INDIA, CIRCA 1775
Watercolour and ink on paper, the myna depicted perched on a pigeon pea branch, inscribed in black ink 'Bird, Hen Powy, Shrub Arhaar', on watermarked paper

12 ½ x 15in. (31.7 x 38.1cm.)
Provenance
Collection of Lord and Lady Fairhaven
Special notice
These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

Lot Essay

The depiction of the grey headed myna bird here is near identical to that of a bird on a page from the Impey Album which was formerly in the collection of the late Anthony Hobson and sold Christie’s, London, 10 June 2015, lot 58. That folio was signed ‘Shaykh Zayn al-Din native of Patna’ and dated 1782. So similar are the two birds that it seems likely that they, and by extension the painting of the following lot from the same series as this one, are the work of the same celebrated artist or a close follower. It is notable that the artist copies the birds so similarly whilst allowing a certain freedom in the depiction of the different plants. It is possible therefore that Zayn al-Din composed his multi-subject drawings in a modular fashion, sometimes working with the same subjects but shifting them so that they fit the brief. The close similarity between the bird here and on the Hobson folio raises the possibility that Zayn al-Din and the other Impey artists worked sometimes from copybooks or from dead specimens rather than from life.

Shaykh Zayn al-Din was a native of Patna trained in the naturalistic Mughal tradition and the most senior of the three painters who worked on the natural history illustrations in the famous Impey Album. He was also the only one to work on multi-subject paintings, mixing ornithological and botanical subjects as seen here. This painting, and that of the following lot, bears hallmarks of his style with the bird positioned on a clipped flowering branch angled toward the upper right corner of the sheet.  This approach was characteristic of Zayn al-Din and his close followers.

For another painting from the same series, and a note about the dating, please see the following lot.

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