AN IMAGINARY FLOWER
AN IMAGINARY FLOWER
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This lot is offered without reserve.
AN IMAGINARY FLOWER

AURANGABAD, NORTH DECCAN, VS 1726/1669 AD

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AN IMAGINARY FLOWER
AURANGABAD, NORTH DECCAN, VS 1726/1669 AD
From a Siddantha-sara, Siddantha-bodha and Aporaksha-siddantha of Maharaja Jaswant Singh of Jodhpur (r.1629-1678 AD), opaque pigments on a gold ground, the reverse with 15ll. black and red devanagari written by Vyasa Madhava, gold illuminated margins
Painting 7 ¾ x 4 3/8 ins. (19.7 x 11 cm.); folio 12 ¼ x 7 ½ ins. (31 x 19 cm.)
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This lot is offered without reserve.

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Rahul Kadakia
Rahul Kadakia

Lot Essay

Further leaves from the same manuscript were exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (Haidar and Sardar, 2015, no.169, pp.292-3). The text refers to a previous exhibition that published further leaves and, one assumes, the colophon. The text contains three philosophical works by the long-lived maharaja of Jodhpur Jaswant Singh. He started out as a loyal ally of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan but backed Dara Shikoh over Alamgir (Aurangzeb). Aurangzeb showered honours and titles on him to in his loyalty, and to assist in his military campaign against Shivaji in the Deccan (Bose, 2015, p.174).

This volume shows clearly the mix of influences that were all to be found throughout India at this time. The Hindu text is combined with Mughal-like flowers, but with an Deccani imaginary flavour and the Aurangabad gold ground. These are framed in borders that derive from the Ottoman cintamani design. Attributing the manuscript without the colophon would not be straightforward.

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