ARTIST:
details / Emperor / Artist’s style / comments / resource
references / Accredited /signed paintings
Kanha / Akbar /
- Specialist in animal painting
- Worked on Baburnama
- Designed “A family of elephants”
- Collaborated with Ikhlas on works
- Designed “A family of elephants” p116 PPP
Ikhlas / Akbar /
- Worked on Baburnama
- Collaborated with Kanha on works
- Worked on “A family of elephants” p116 PPP, but only known for 1 other manuscript c.1595
Mansur
(Nadir al-Asr) / Jahangir & /
- Natural history painter (highly specialized)
- Given the title “Nadir al-Asr” (Wonder of the Age)
- He stalked birds and animals in the field, where he and his subjects were more comfortable and behaved more naturally
- Recorded the gestures & expressions of the animal world, as opposed to the humans world
- “The Lion at Rest” ca.1585 (attributed) p10 TM
- “Peafowl”
- “Squirrels in a Plane Tree (with Nadir az-Zaman) p21 TM
Tara Kalan / Akbar /
- Copied as a tinted drawing from an original by Basawan for the Akbarnama of c.1590
- Emperor Akbar witnessing the battle of the yogis (ascribed falsely to Miskin) c.1604 p117 PPP
Sanwala / Akbar /
- Not a star of Akbar’s court, but a dependable worker who contributed consistently to manuscripts
- Rarely worked on his own
- Horse and Groom – c.1590 p118 PPP
Miskin / Akbar /
- One of the stars of Akbar’s court – seen as the most inventive
- Abu’l Fazl listed him among the famous painters of the day
- Specialized in animal painting and natural history, painting with close observation and detail
- (probably) “Krishna Lifts Mountain Govardhan” ca. 1590 p14 TM
Abd as-Samad / Humayun /
- Safavid artist who agreed to join Humayan after his exile in Persia, and start up atelier in his new court
- Trained and supervised artists & painters of talent recruited from within the land & from abroad.
- As a Persian painter, approach was v.styalized and controlled including meticulous, decorative pattern and arabesques.
- p8 TM
Mir Sayyid Ali / Humayun /
- Safavid artist who agreed to join Humayan after his exile in Persia, and start up atelier in his new court
- Trained and supervised artists & painters of talent recruited from within the land & from abroad.
- As a Persian painter, approach was v.styalized and controlled including meticulous, decorative pattern and arabesques.
- “The prophet Elias rescuing Nur Ad-Dahr from the sea.” Ca.1570 p6/7 TM
- p8 TM
Basawan / Akbar /
- Seen as one of the most gifted of Akbar’s court
- He often returned to paintings he had outlined or designed, & enjoyed colouring parts that appealed to him
- Recognised for liberated brushwork & innovation
- Good at representing character and drama
- Good at modelling & showing tactile form
- Father to Monahar
- Descrubed by Abu’;-Fazl, in A in-I Akbarias, “In designing and portrait painting and colouring and painting illusionistically and other aspects of this art [Basawan] became unrivalled in the world and many connoisseurs prefer him to Daswanth.”
TM -13-15 /
- “Akbar’s Adventures on his Elephant Hawa’I” p5 TM
- p8 TM
- “Tamarusa and Shapur at the Island of Nigar” p9 TM
- “An Imperial Ram” p13 TM
- “A Crisis at Court” p14 TM
Kesu Kalan /
- “The Mast Elephant Citranand” – designed TM p6
Monahar / Akbar/ Jahangir /
- Son of Basawan
Daswanth / Akbar /
- Given the accolade “surpassed all painters and become the master of the age” by Abu’;-Fazl, in A in-I Akbari
- A Hindu painter who started as a humble employee of the imperial atelier
- Died suddenly in 1584, bringing a promising career abruptly to an end.
- Belonged to the humble kahar cast (meaning litter-bearers)
IMP 11-13
Bishndas / Jahangir /
- Specialised in winding village spaces
- Nephew of the artist Nanha
- Served as an artist with Jahangir’s embassy to the court of Shah Abbas I
- “The Birth of Jahangir” – p17 TM
- “Shaikh Phul in his Hermitage” c1610 p20 TM
Abu l-Hasan
(Nadiru-z-Zaman) / Jahangir /
- left-handed
- One of Jahagir’s favourites
- Was “house-born” meaning that his talent was
- nurtured by the court since childhood
- honoured with the title Nadiru-z-Zaman (meaning the wonder of the age.)
- Tells us much of the daily life and detail of the Mughal court, especially textiles, weapons, palaces etc
- Son of well-known Iranian artist, Aqa-Rizi Jahangiri
- The forefront of Jahangir’s artists
- Could set his hand to most subjects etc
- “Emperor Jahangir at the Jharoka Window” ca.1620 p18 TM
Aqa-Riza Jahangiri / Jahangir /
- father to Abu-L-Hasan.
Nanha / Jahangir /
- uncle to the artist Bishndas