Page 189 - March 23 2022 Boinghams NYC Indian and Himalayan Art
P. 189

PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED
 WEST COAST COLLECTION
 479
 A PORTRAIT OF A RULER SMOKING A HOOKAH
 NORTH INDIA, PUNJAB HILLS, MANKOT, CIRCA 1710
 Folio 8¬ x 12¬ in. (21.9 x 32.1 cm.)
 Image 7Ω x 11æ in. (19.1 x 29.8 cm.)
 $30,000-50,000
 PROVENANCE:
 Acquired from Dr. William Ehrenfeld, San Francisco, 1985,
 by repute.

 In  this  striking  portrait,  a  dignified  ruler  smokes  a  hookah  while
 attended by two pages. The young boy tending to the ruler’s hookah
 and  the  attendant  fanning  him  with  a  peacock  morchha  each
 wear elegantly patterned jama which contrast with the glistening
 white jama and turban of the raja. The ruler is accessorized with
 a vibrantly patterned waist scarf, gold and jewel inlayed pendant,
 bangle,  earrings  and  turban  ornament,  and  a  fine  sword,  dagger
 and katar set. His forehead is prominently marked with a Vaishnava
 tilaka. The floor is layered with patterned carpets, one running the
 length of the scene, a smaller floral carpet for the ruler and a small
 circular matt on which the hookah is positioned. No detail is spared
 in this distinguished painting.
 The  varied  color  scheme  is  magnificently  flamboyant,  while  the
 lines  are  confidently  controlled.  The  quality  of  the  painting  takes
 after  an  earlier  portrait  of  Raja  Mahapit  Dev  of  Mankot,  ascribed
 to the Master at the Court of Mankot circa 1670-80 (published in
 B.N.  Goswamy  and  E.  Fischer,  Pahari  Masters,  New  Delhi,  2009
 (reprint), pp. 100-101, no. 36). The Master of the Court of Mankot,
 ascribed  to  be  a  painter  by  the  name  of  Meju,  was  active  at  the
 Mankot  Court  between  1680  and  1730.  Meju  created  numerous
 portraits and illustrations to sacred epics and ragamalas. His work
 is characterized by monochromatic backgrounds of green or ochre,
 highlighted  by  dominant  colors  detailing  the  figures  and  objects.
 Other portraits attributed to the Mankot master include a portrait
 of the Vaishnav priest Gosain Ramji in the Kronos Collection and
 an earlier painting of Raja Mahipat Dev of Mankot at Prayer at the
 Rietberg Museum. The style and quality of such portraits bear great
 comparability to the present painting, it being possible the present
 lot was created by the hand of Meju as well.
 The  work  lacks  an  inscription,  so  it  is  difficult  to  ascertain  the
 identity  of  the  subject.  A  portrait  of  Kirpal  Pal,  the  Maharaja  of
 Basohli  (r.  circa  1678-1693)  in  the  Howard  Hodgkin  Collection
 (Yousef  Jameel  Centre  for  Islamic  and  Asian  Art,  LI118.37)  bears
 resemblance to the figure in the present painting, which could be
 a possible identification of the figure; however, that identification is
 complicated by the fact that the present subject is wearing a stone-
 inlay pendant different from the Mughal heirloom Kirpal Pal is most
 often depicted with.










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