Page 204 - March 23 2022 Boinghams NYC Indian and Himalayan Art
P. 204

PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED WEST COAST COLLECTION
          485
          A LARGE PAINTING OF THAKUR DURJAN SINGH
          WITH COURTIERS
          INDIA, RAJASTHAN, GHANERAO, DATED 1784
          Folio 22Ω x 20√ in. (57.1 x 53 cm.)
          Image 20Ω x 19√ in. (53 x 50.5 cm.)
          $25,000-35,000
          PROVENANCE:
          Private collection, Europe, acquired between 1970 and 1973, by repute.
          Simon Ray Ltd., London, November 2011, no. 62.

          Thakur  Durjan  Singh  of  Ghanerao  (r.  1778-1799)  radiates  in  a  golden  jama
          and resplendently large Jodhpur-style turban while seated in durbar with his
          white-clad courtiers. Almost thirty men in total attend court in the splendid
          white  marble  palace,  each  identified  by  Devanagari  inscription.  Thakur
          Durjan  Singh’s  inscription  is  accompanied  by  the  date,  samvat  1841  (1784
          CE).The figures are framed by multifoil archways decorated with arabesque
          florals. The arches are surmounted by a row of jali windows of varied design.
          Diminutive  figures—musicians,  mahouts,  soldiers—perform  their  service  in
          the  foreground,  in  front  of  the  sandstone  brick  foundation,  each  labeled  by
          inscription as well.
          Ghanerao  was  a  small  thikana,  or  fiefdom,  situated  on  the  border  between
          Mewar and Marwar. The thikana had a strong tradition of court painting, the
          atelier employing local court artists and visiting painters from Jodhpur, Mewar
          and Bikaner. Due to its geographical position, painting in Ghanerao carries a
          very Mewari foundation, but with stylistic variance due to the diverse array of
          artists at the atelier. Works from the Ghanerao have now been dispersed into
          private collections, but fortunately, many paintings are extensively inscribed,
          identifying place, ruler, and date. For more information of the rich corpus of
          works from Ghanerao, see R. Crill “The Thakurs of Ghanerao as Patrons of
          Painting,”  in  A.  Topsfield,  Court  Painting  in  Rajasthan,  2000,  Mumbai,  pp.
          92-108.





























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