BAHRAM KHAN HUNTING
BAHRAM KHAN HUNTING
BAHRAM KHAN HUNTING
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BAHRAM KHAN HUNTING

MUGHAL INDIA, POSSIBLY DECCAN, LATE 17TH OR EARLY 18TH CENTURY

Details
BAHRAM KHAN HUNTING
MUGHAL INDIA, POSSIBLY DECCAN, LATE 17TH OR EARLY 18TH CENTURY
Opaque pigments heightened with gold on paper, Urdu couplet in black nasta'liq at lower edge, laid down in gold rules on card within buff margins with gold floral illumination, further inscription in upper margin, the reverse with 7ll. black and polychrome muhaqqaq set within gold rules and polychrome floral borders, the margins similarly decorated, mounted, framed and glazed
Painting 10 ¼ x 6 7/8in. (25.8 x 17.6cm.); folio 12 7⁄8 x 9in. (32.8 x 22.7cm.)
Provenance
American art market, 1995
Engraved
Along the lower edge of the painting in Urdu, zalim yeh said ul sarfazak si teri, us roz se band hai ke tu na sawar tha 'O cruel one, this captive heart and it pride of yours; From that very day all came to a halt, the day you did not ride forth'
In the upper border, Bahram Khan

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Lot Essay

Aurangzeb's defeat of the Deccani Sultanates of Bijapur and Golconda in 1687-88 put an end to the independent court ateliers which had flourished in the Deccan. Whilst many painters moved to the new city of Aurangabad and sought patronage with Mughal and Hindu officers serving Aurangzeb, many also left the Deccan to seek patronage in the Rajput courts and Mughal north India. The result was a merging of styles that makes it difficult to always differentiate between Mughal, Rajput and Deccani paintings of the late 17th century (Mark Zebrowski, Deccani Painting, London, 1983, p.212). This is evidenced by a painting of Atachin Beg Bahadur Qalmaq hawking dated to the early 18th century now in the British Museum (1937,0920,0.6). Atachin Beg Bahadur Qalmaq himself looks very Mughal in style, as do two of his retainers on foot. However, the three other retainers are deeply Deccani in style whilst the horse feels typical of Kishangarh. The style of the landscape in the background is another Deccani element with its moody rolling hills, wildfowl-filled river and pinkish rocky hills (Zebrowski, op.cit., p.213), which are similar to the background seen in the present lot.

This work is also comparable to a painting from the Johnson Album of a Mughal commander in the Deccan, dated circa 1680 (British Library, Johnson Album 26, no.14). The commander rides a similar horse and sports a similar small domed turban to our mounted figure, identified in the upper margin as Bahram Khan. This distinctive shape of turban is also found in a portrait of Abdul Ghaffar Khan Bahadur painted in the Deccan in the last quarter of the 17th century (Zebrowski, op.cit., fig.181, p.210). A painting of similar components but far more Deccani in its style and colouring is in the David Collection and attributed to Aurangabad circa 1700 (13 / 2015).

The Urdu text on the reverse is an extract from the Kitab-i Nauras of Ibrahim ‘Adil Shah II of Bijapur (r.1580-1627). That this text was mounted onto the same album folio may further indicate at a Deccani attribution of the painting if the album was compiled thematically.

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