AN ENAMELLED AND DIAMOND-SET SUITE OF PAAN BOXES
AN ENAMELLED AND DIAMOND-SET SUITE OF PAAN BOXES
AN ENAMELLED AND DIAMOND-SET SUITE OF PAAN BOXES
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AN ENAMELLED AND DIAMOND-SET SUITE OF PAAN BOXES

HYDERABAD, DECCAN, 1760-1780

Details
AN ENAMELLED AND DIAMOND-SET SUITE OF PAAN BOXES
HYDERABAD, DECCAN, 1760-1780
Comprising a large container and eight smaller boxes on a fitted tray, all set with diamonds on a green enamel ground, the outer rim of the tray decorated in dark blue enamel, the interior of all boxes and base of tray are undecorated
Tray 13 ¾ x 11 3/8 ins. (35 x 29 cm.); largest box 4 3/8 x 2 3/8 x 2 1/8 ins. (11.2 x 6.2 x 5.3 cm.); each small box 1 ½ x 1 1/8 x 1 1/8 ins. (3.7 x 2.8 x 2.7 cm.)
Provenance
By repute, Nizams of Hyderabad
Habsburg Feldman, Geneva, 9 November 1987, lot 20
Sotheby’s, London, 9 October 2013, lot 241
Exhibited
The Miho Museum, Koka 2016, pp.98-99, no.68
Grand Palais, Paris 2017, pp.194-95, no.147
The Doge’s Palace, Venice 2017, p.225, no.153
The Palace Museum, Beijing 2018, pp.246-47, no.157
de Young Legion of Honor, San Francisco 2018, p. 114, no. 51

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Rahul Kadakia
Rahul Kadakia

Lot Essay

This bejeweled suite of paan boxes illustrates the wealth and splendor of the richest royal courts of India in the eighteenth century and the use of the most lavishly decorated objects in Indian courtly tradition. The larger paan daan (container) would have been used for holding betel nut and prepared paan. The smaller boxes, an unusual feature, were for additional spices and would have been part of the elaborate ritual of preparing and offering paan to guests at formal durbar assemblies (Paris 2017, pp.194-195). The floral gem settings and the translucent green enamel employed for decoration suggests Hyderabad in the Deccan as the centre of production. For other similarly decorated objects from Hyderabad, dateable to the third quarter of the eighteenth century, see lots 139 and 241.
A partly gilded, silver paan box and tray of similar style and size, dated to the second half of the eighteenth century, is in the Clive Collection at Powis Castle (Archer et al, New York, 1987, p.74, no.86, ill. p.58).

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