Arts of the Islamic World and India, including Fine Rugs and Carpets

Arts of the Islamic World and India, including Fine Rugs and Carpets

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 51. King Dabshalim visits the sage in his cave, ascribed to Fazl, India, Mughal, circa 1605-10.

Property from a Prestigious Private European Collection

King Dabshalim visits the sage in his cave, ascribed to Fazl, India, Mughal, circa 1605-10

Auction Closed

April 26, 01:36 PM GMT

Estimate

50,000 - 80,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

gouache heightened with gold on paper, dark blue border with gold floral scroll, coloured rules, later margins with flowering plants reserved on a buff ground, artist's name inscribed in nasta'liq


painting: 21.2 by 12.3cm. 

leaf: 37.6 by 26.2cm. 

Ex-collection Nasli (d.1971) & Alice Heeramaneck, New York.
Ex-collection Christian Humann (d.1981), (Pan-Asian Collection), New York.
Ex-collection Robert Hatfield Ellsworth (d.2014), New York.




This painting of a king visiting a sage depicts a scene from the Anvar-i Suhayli by Husayn Va'iz al-Kashifi that Akbar had re-written by Abu'l Fazl in a simpler version as Iyar-i Danish.


The artist Fazl was associated with the sub-Imperial patron Khan-i Khanan 'Abd al-Rahim Khan. Fazl produced a number of illustrations for 'Abd al-Rahim's Ramayana between 1589 and 1599 now in the Freer Gallery of Art and also contributed towards a dispersed Razmnama dated 1616. The majority of his works are inscribed 'amal-i Fazl ('work of Fazl') however this painting and a few from the first decade of the seventeenth century are just inscribed as Fazl (see Gahlin 1991, no.26, pl.24 and Colnaghi 1979, no.17.) The amal-i Fazl paintings are completed in a more sophisticated manner and it has been queried by Seyller (Seyller 1999 p.286) as to whether the artist could be the same as 'Abd al-Rahim's Fazl. However the name is unusual and the finish of a painting is often indicative of the time spent on it. Seyller documents that there was more pressure on 'Abd al-Rahim's artists to complete their paintings within a few days compared to the imperial artist who could take up to fifty days.

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