Page 150 - September 20th 2021, Indian and Himalayan Art Christie's NYC
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                  AN ILLUSTRATION FROM A NALA AND DAMAYANTI       Damayanti faints and is attended to by maidens after Nala abandons     A PAINTING OF A NAYIKA AND SAKHI                Admired for its bold use of color and form, the Basohli school flourished
                  SERIES: DAMAYANTI FAINTS IN THE FOREST          her in exile. Eleven pages from this series are at the Victoria and    INDIA, PAHARI HILLS, BASOHLI, CIRCA 1710        in the Pahari hills in the 17th and 18th centuries. Although it is not
                  INDIA, PAHARI HILLS, BILASPUR, CIRCA 1760-1770  Albert Museum, London (acc. nos. IS.30-1954 through IS.39.1954         Folio 10º x 9√ in. (26 x 25.1 cm.)              known what series this painting belongs to, it possibly derives from
                  Folio 7Ω X 11 in. (19.1 x 30.4 cm.)             and  IS.265.1953). Also, see  W.G. Archer, Indian Paintings from the   Image 8¡ x 7Ω in. (21.3 x 19.7 cm.)             a series on Bhanudatta’s Sanskrit love poem  Rasamanjari, a popular
                  Image 6º x 9æ in. (15.9 x 24.8 cm.)             Punjab Hills, London, 1973, pp. 184-7, nos. 43i-xi. Archer suggests the                                                subject in Basolhi painting classifying and celebrating the moods of
                                                                  series was commissioned as a moral warning by the queen-mother of      $15,000-20,000                                  love. Here two women, a heroine and her confidante, are depicted
                  $12,000-18,000                                  Devi Chand (r. 1741-1778); fatefully, Devi Chand’s grandson and later                                                  with the typical stylized facial type dominated by their large, intense
                  PROVENANCE:                                     successor  Kharak  Chand  (r.  1824-1839)  fell  victim  to  the  very  same                                           eyes. They sit in a landscape full of brilliant green and ochres closely
                  Sotheby’s New York, 4 June 1994 lot 368.        vices that caused Nala’s demise, greatly threatening the state stability                                               associated with the school.
                                                                  of Bilaspur.
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