AN ATTENDANT DELIVERING A LETTER
AN ATTENDANT DELIVERING A LETTER
AN ATTENDANT DELIVERING A LETTER
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AN ATTENDANT DELIVERING A LETTER

MURSHIDABAD, INDIA, CIRCA 1790

Details
AN ATTENDANT DELIVERING A LETTER
MURSHIDABAD, INDIA, CIRCA 1790
Opaque pigments heightened with gold on paper, within white and black rules, mounted to card, framed and glazed
11 3⁄8 x 9 1⁄8 in. (28.8 x 23.2cm.)
Provenance
Hobhouse Ltd., London, 1986
Literature
P. Mason, Indian Painting during the British Period, Hobhouse Ltd., London, 1986, no.4
R. Skelton, The Indian Heritage: Court Life and Arts under Mughal Rule , Exhibition Catalogue, London, 1982, p.51, no.92
Exhibited
Indian Painting during the British Period, Hobhouse Ltd., London, 1986

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Lot Essay

Despite an apparent lack of urgency on the part of the attendant, the letter is most likely being delivered to Nawab Muhammad Riza Khan, Naib Nazim of Bengal between 1756 and 1775. A painting which is likely the pendant to ours depicting the Nawab seated on a lacquered wooden chair and smoking a huqqa is in the Philadelphia Museum of Art and was formerly in the collections of Robert Alderman and Dr Mark Zebrowski and Alvin O. Bellak (Acc.no. 2004-149-70; Skelton 1982, p.51, no. 92; Mason 2001, no.78, p.184). Of near identical size to the present paining, the Philadelphia painting shares the same sparse composition, cool grey palette and woven grass matted floor.

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