PORTRAIT OF A SUFI SAINT
PORTRAIT OF A SUFI SAINT
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE LONDON COLLECTION
PORTRAIT OF A SUFI SAINT

MUGHAL INDIA, FIRST HALF 17TH CENTURY

细节
PORTRAIT OF A SUFI SAINT
MUGHAL INDIA, FIRST HALF 17TH CENTURY
Opaque pigments on paper, mounted within finely illuminated gold and polychrome illuminated panels with a title in gold nasta'liq above, laid down within margins with fine gold illustrated margins depicting various animals and vegetation, the number '20' in the upper margin, set between gold and polychrome rules, pasted onto card
Painting 3 1⁄8 x 1 ¾in. (8 x 4.2cm.); folio 14 x 9 ½in. (36 x 24cm.)

荣誉呈献

Sara Plumbly
Sara Plumbly Director, Head of Department

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Inscription:
Above the painting: andar siyas hiyrad(?)

In earlier Mughal painting the depiction of Sufi saints was for the most part allegorical or historical but by the 1640s there was a shift towards portraiture of living saints. This was no doubt fostered under the patronage of Prince Dara Shikoh (d. 1659) and Princess Jahanara Begum (d. 1681), who were both followers of the Qadiri Sufi sect (Murad Khan Mumtaz, ”Contemplating the Face of the Master: Portraits of Sufi Saints as Aids to Meditation in Seventeenth Century Mughal India”, Ars Orientalis, 50, 2021, p. 106).

The portrait in the present album page strongly resembles the Qadiri Sufi Saint Mian Mir of Lahore (d. 1635). With his successor Mullah Shah Badakhshi, Mian Mir was the spiritual guide to Dara Shikoh and Jahanara Begum. A painting of Dara Shikoh, Mian Mir and Mullah Shah by Chitarman showing the three sat on a mat outside a simple hut similar to the one in our painting is in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London (IM.250-1921). Another similar painting by Lalchand is in the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Washington D.C. (S1986.432).

The splendid illumination surrounding the portrait is of an almost identical format to that of the illuminated double frontispiece of the Padshahnama of circa 1657, now in the Royal Collection, Windsor (RCIN 1005025.d and 1005025.e). The gold-illuminated outer margins are of the type associated with marginal painting of the late 16th and early 17th century, especially under the Mughal Emperor Jahangir (r. 1605-27). Such was the importance of marginal painting that Jahangir did not consider a miniature complete without a highly ornamented border (S.P. Verma, ‘Margin-Painting in Medieval Indian Art’, Proceedings of the Indian History of Congress, vol. 40, 1979, p. 460). Our dynamic margins, with birds, deer and lions in a landscape, relate closely to a folio from a now-dispersed royal Shahnama of circa 1610, now in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (M.78.9.5).

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