Unidentified
artist
Contemporary
Indian miniature executed over an early book leaf.
My belief that this is not
an antique painting is based on the fact that the image appears to be painted
over the text and that the uppermost surface of the paint is smooth rather than
slightly abraded as would be the case if the painting had been an original
image in an illuminated book.
Tempera and
gouache with gold leaf on fine India paper
Size: (sheet)
20 x 10.3 cm
Condition: worm
holes in the sheet and the painted image has small losses (i.e. very tiny
flakes of paint are missing).
I am selling
this exquisite hand-painted Indian book-leaf for AU$300 in total (currently US$226.48/EUR202.74/GBP172.98
at the time of posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere
in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this fine example of the Mogul style of painting,
please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal
invoice to make the payment easy.
I was shuffling
through my prints last night and I came upon this exquisite painting that I
collected about thirty years ago when travelling through India in an inappropriate vehicle: a double-decker
London bus. At the time that I purchased the painting I knew (or at least I suspected)
that it was unlikely to be an original Mogul illuminated leaf from a book but
I wanted the page regardless, simply because it was so well executed and it fitted well
with my vision of Indian painting: the use of stacked space where the portrayed
subjects are layered on top of one another rather than disposed using the Western
convention of perspective and the arrangement of key pictorial elements in separated “wells” of space.
I have been given very interesting information from a fellow Instagramer (omid__shr) regarding the inscription on this leaf. Rather than modify the supplied info, the following comments from omid__shr are copied directly from my Instagram gallery with the username: printsandprinciples.
ReplyDelete"this poet is Jalal'aldin Mohammad balkhei romi (Molana), the biggest Persians poet"
"First distich
Of necessity, his reason is vanquished: his movement is towards naught but perdition
Oh, blest is that one whose reason is male, while his wicked fleshly soul is female and helpless"
"http://www.masnavi.net/en/"