IBRAHIM ADIL SHAH II OF BIJAPUR
IBRAHIM ADIL SHAH II OF BIJAPUR
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IBRAHIM ADIL SHAH II OF BIJAPUR

BIJAPUR, CENTRAL INDIA, EARLY 17TH CENTURY

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IBRAHIM ADIL SHAH II OF BIJAPUR
BIJAPUR, CENTRAL INDIA, EARLY 17TH CENTURY
Gouache heightened with gold on paper, Ibrahim Adil Shah II wearing white and gold robes sits upon a large elephant whilst being fanned by an attendant, around him are further attendants and courtiers riding elephants draped in richly coloured textiles, a large white parasol and two orange banners are held above with cranes flying overhead, set within gold decorated floral borders on green and blue ground, reverse with four couplets of elegant nasta'liq signed by Mahmud ibn Ishaq, folio with wide gold floral lattice margins
Painting 5½ x 4¼in. (14 x 10.8cm.)

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Lot Essay

The calligrapher of the panel mounted on the back of this album page signs Mahmud ibn Ishaq. This may refer to Mahmud ibn Ishaq al-Shahabi who was a much praised pupil of Mir 'Ali and was taken to Bukhara by 'Ubaydallah Khan after the capture of Herat. His recorded works are dated between AH 924/1518-19 AD and AH 993/1585-86 AD (Mehdi Bayani, Ahval-va asar-e khosh-nevisan, vol III., Tehran, 1346, pp.876-880). For a full account of his life see V. Minorsky (tr.), Calligraphers and Painters, Washington, 1959, p. 131.

A painting of Ibrahim 'Adil Shah II riding an elephant under a canopy in the Victoria and Albert Museum (inv. D.398-1885), signed by the artist 'Ali Riza, depicts a very similar bi-coloured elephant to the elephants near the right and left-hand margins of our painting, (Keelan Overton, 'Ali Riza (The Bodleian Painter), in Masters of Indian Painting, Vol. I, fig. 11, p. 385). Keelan attributes the comparable work to the first quarter of the 17th Century Bijapur. The form of the main elephant in our painting is also very similar to an elephant also ridden by Ibrahim 'Adil Shah II in a work by attributed to the Leningrad Painter, (Mark Zebrowski, Deccani Painting, London, 1983, fig. 71). Zebrowski claims that this specific elephant could well have been Atash Khan the favourite bull elephant of Ibrahim 'Adil Shah II.

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