Page 147 - September 20th 2021, Indian and Himalayan Art Christie's NYC
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PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF CAROL SUMMERS
 464
 AN ILLUSTRATION FROM THE ‘SHANGRI’ RAMAYANA
 (STYLE III) – RAMA AND LAKSHMANA SEATED WITH
 SUGRIVA AND VIBHISANA
 NORTH INDIA, PUNJAB HILLS, KULU OR BAHU (JAMMU),
 CIRCA 1700-1730
 Folio 8¬ x 12¬ in. (22 x 32 cm.)
 Image 7√ x 11Ω in. (20 x 29.2 cm.)

 $12,000-18,000




 This illustration is probably from the Lanka or Sundara Kanda, the
 fifth book of the Ramayana. It depicts Rama with blue skin, seated
 with his younger brother Lakshmana. Behind the brothers are
 Sugriva, the king of the monkeys, and Vibhishana, Rama’s ally and
 the future king of Lanka.
 This series of paintings is known as the 'Shangri' Ramayana because
 it was once in the possession of the Rajas of Shangri, a branch of
 the Kulu royal family. Scholars have debated over the origin of this
 Ramayana  series. W.G.  Archer initially  found  Kulu  to  be  the  most
 likely origin. According  to the  family tradition of Raja  Raghubir
 Singh, the pictures were painted in Kulu during the reigns of Raja
 Jagat Singh and Raja Bidhi Singh. On the basis of style and date,
 Archer distinguished four painting classifications within the series.
 The present folio, which is probably from the  Sundara  or  Lanka
 Kanda has been executed in ‘Style III.’ Archer describes it as a “style
 of lush exuberance” and says it was chiefly used to illustrate jungle
 scenes as well as the adventures of Hanuman and the monkey army
 in Lanka (W.G. Archer, Indian Paintings from the Punjab Hills, 1973,
 Vol. I, pp. 325-329). B.N. Goswamy and Eberhard Fischer have, more
 recently, argued that the paintings should be attributed to Bahu on
 account of the figurative similarities with Raja Kirpal Dev and Raja
 Anand Dev of Bahu (B.N. Goswamy and E. Fischer, Pahari Masters –
 Court Painters of Northern India, Zurich, 1992, pp. 76-81).
 For three other folios from the series, executed in ‘Style III,’ see T.
 McInerney, S. Kossak, N. Haider,  Divine Pleasures: Painting from
 India’s Rajput Courts – The Kronos Collections, (exhibition catalogue),
 New York, 2016, cat. no. 58-60, pp. 168-173. With the background
 reduced to a bare minimum, the ‘Style III’ folios have clear narrative
 action. The dense forms and bright colors derive from the ‘Style I’
 illustrations of the Early Bahu Master.
 The series was dispersed in 1961. A very substantial proportion of
 the series, 168 folios, are in the National Museum in New Delhi.
 Other examples are in a number of collections including the Bharat
 Kala Bhavan, Varanasi, the British Library, London, the Victoria and
 Albert Museum, London, the Rietberg Museum, Zurich, the Los
 Angeles County Museum of Art, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts,
 the San Diego Museum of Arts (Edwin Binney 3rd Collection), the
 Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Philadelphia Museum
 of Art and the Portland Museum of Art, as well as in several private
 collections. Another folio from the 'Shangri' Ramayana series, Style
 IV, sold at Christie's New York, 20 March 2019, lot 695 for $37,500.
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