Page 196 - March 23 2022 Boinghams NYC Indian and Himalayan Art
P. 196

PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED
          WEST COAST COLLECTION
          482
          A PAINTING OF BAZ BAHADUR AND RUPMATI HUNTING
          AT NIGHT
          INDIA, MUGHAL, DELHI, 18TH CENTURY
          Folio 10√ x 15º in. (27.6 x 38.7 cm.)
          Image 6æ x 9 in. (17.1 x 22.9 cm.)
          $10,000-15,000
          PROVENANCE:
          Acquired from Dr. Wiliam Ehrenfeld, San Francisco, 1984, by repute.
          This  folio  represents  a  popular  subject  in  Indian  painting,  the  love
          between  Sultan  Baz  Bahadur  and  his  courtesan  Rupmati.  Baz
          Bahadur (r. 1555-61) was the last king of Malwa before its absorption
          into the Mughal Empire who fell for the beautiful musician, dancer and
          poetess  Rupmati  after  encountering  her  on  a  hunting  trip.  Rupmati
          was  made  Queen  of  Malwa,  but  the  fantastic  love  story  came  to  a
          tragic  end  in  1561,  when  the  Mughal  Emperor  Akbar  and  his  forces
          took the kingdom. Baz Bahadur fled without his beloved Rupmati, who
          then decided to commit suicide rather than submit to their conqueror.
          In  the  present  painting,  the  two  are  wildly  absorbed  in  each  other’s
          gaze, illuminated against the dark somber night. They are completely
          oblivious  to  their  soon  to  be  ill-fated  ending,  as  an  army  of  soldiers
          follow  in  their  wake.  Dark,  theriomorphic  clouds  gather  above  the
          soldiers. This subject, due to its representation of a great short-lived
          passion  and  an  impending  despair,  was  particularly  popular  in  18th
          century Mughal painting, as the imperial capital, Delhi, was subject to
          constant threat and decline. For another Delhi school example from
          the same period, a similar painting is published in D. Ehnbom, Indian
          Miniatures: The Ehrenfeld Collection, New York, 1985, no. 30, pp. 76-77.








































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