A PAINTING OF KRISHNA DISGUISED AS RADHA'S ATTENDANT
A PAINTING OF KRISHNA DISGUISED AS RADHA'S ATTENDANT
A PAINTING OF KRISHNA DISGUISED AS RADHA'S ATTENDANT
A PAINTING OF KRISHNA DISGUISED AS RADHA'S ATTENDANT
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A PAINTING OF KRISHNA DISGUISED AS RADHA'S ATTENDANT

INDIA, RAJASTHAN, KISHANGARH, 19TH CENTURY

Details
A PAINTING OF KRISHNA DISGUISED AS RADHA'S ATTENDANT
INDIA, RAJASTHAN, KISHANGARH, 19TH CENTURY
folio 12 7/8 x 8 3/8 in. (32.7 x 21. cm.)
image 10 1/2 x 6 in. (26.7 x 15.2 cm.)
Provenance
Joron-Derem, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 19 December 2017, lot 72.
Collection of Pierre le Tan; Sotheby's Paris, 16 March 2021, lot 10.

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Lot Essay

The present painting is a later reworking of a larger composition attributed to the Kishangarh court artist Nihal Chand, circa 1735-1757, published by E. Dickinson and K. Khandalava in Kishangarh Painting, New Delhi, 1959, p. 32, plate VII. The scene depicts Sanjhi Lila, a festival for the namesake mother goddess, in which only women are allowed to participate. Krishna, longing to be with his beloved, masquerades as a woman so he can join Radha and her maidens in the festivities. In the present scene, both Radha and Krishna are delineated by a gold halo. Khandalavala and Dickinson suggest that the design of the composition might be inspired by Persian garden carpets, in which each scene is enclosed by a panel.

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