PINTURAS MOGOLES

The Elephant Combat
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8.2 inch X 5.5 inch
¥15,938
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Includes any tariffs and taxes
The Young Damsel Dressing Her Hair
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6 inch x 9 inch
¥26,563
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Pashu Kunjar - Composite Elephant
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16.5 inch X 12.5 inch
¥157,098
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Mughal Flower
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4.5" x 6.5"
¥47,813
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Ladies Engaged in Dance
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16" X 13"
¥87,277
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Dancing Ladies
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10.5 inches x 14 inches
¥87,277
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The Colors of Dance
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10 inch X 13.0 inch
¥65,268
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Creating Her Own Raga for a Thunderous Night
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10 inch X 13.0 inch
¥65,268
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Calligraphic Falcon
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6.1 inch x 9.7 inch
¥15,938
Includes any tariffs and taxes
The Young Damsel Dressing Her Hair
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6 inch X 9 inch
¥39,464
Includes any tariffs and taxes
The Science of Natural History Elevated to the Status of Art
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9 inch X 7.4 inch
¥35,670
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Lady with Flower
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9.3 inch X 11.5 inch
¥29,598
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Lady in Dancing Pose
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8 inch X 10.8 inch
¥13,661
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Playing with Elephant
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15 inch X 12 inch
¥82,723
Includes any tariffs and taxes
A Portrait of King Akbar the Falconer
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10.5" x 13.0"
¥77,411
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The Begum of Oudh Flying a Kite
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13.5 inch X 10.5 inch
¥62,991
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Gypsies
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10 inch X 13 inch
¥72,098
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Jehangir with His Falcon
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9 inch X 12 inch
¥65,268
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Lioness with the Face of a Woman:  A Grotesque Form
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10.0 inch X 8.0 inch
¥78,929
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Royal Women Hawking (Falconry)
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9.5 inches X 11.5 inches
¥72,098
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Yogini from Deccan, Perhaps the Princess Badr-e-Munir
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6.3 inch X 10.0 inch
¥65,268
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Love on a Harp Shaped Boat
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11.3 inch X 8.0 inch
¥65,268
Includes any tariffs and taxes
The Tranquil Pleasures of Love
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9.0" X 10.8"
¥96,384
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Mughal Emperor Shahjahan with His Sick Wife Mumtaj Mahal
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14.0 inch X 11.0 inch
¥72,098
Includes any tariffs and taxes
A Courtier Buying Kites
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13.8 inch X 10.5 inch
¥72,098
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Now No More to Wait
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13.8 inch X 10.5 inch
¥72,098
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Kite-Flying on the Rooftop
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13.7 inch X 10.5 inch
¥61,473
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Women in Love
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8.5 inches X 11.9 inches
¥72,098
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Ladies at a Flower Shop
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10 inches X 13 inches
¥69,063
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Swinging Ladies Awaiting the Arrival of Rain
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10 inches X 13 inches
¥85,000
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The Potter’s Shop
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9.8 inches X 13.0 inches
¥66,786
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Ladies at a Cloth-shop
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10.3 inches X 13.3 inches
¥66,786
Includes any tariffs and taxes
The Mughal Prince Shah Shuja
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10.8 inches X 14.5 inches
¥66,786
Includes any tariffs and taxes
The Royal Damsel Shooting Down Mangoes
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13.3 inches X 10.3 inches
¥64,509
Includes any tariffs and taxes
The Royal Couple on Swing
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9.9 inches X 13.0 inches
¥61,473
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Festival of Kites
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10 inches X 13 inches
¥66,786
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Music Lessons
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10.5" x 14"
¥102,455
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Lighting the Lamp
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11.0" X 13.7"
¥78,929
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Princes Play Polo on Two Beautiful Horses
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13.5 inches x 10.5 inches
¥56,920
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Chingiz Khan Dividing His Empire Between His Sons (Illustration from the Chingiz-nama)
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Calligraphic Falcon
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8.0" X 9.5"
¥23,527
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Calligraphic Falcon
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6.9 inches X 9.8 inches
¥44,018
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Lady Combing Her Hair
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6.0" X 9.0"
¥43,259
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Painting Her Lover
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7.5" X 11.5"
¥34,911
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Paniharins
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13.0" X 10.0"
¥57,679
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Mumtaz Mahal
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8.0" x 11.0"
¥62,232
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Princesses Playing Pigeons Play with Companions (Kabutarbaji)
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9.3" X 11.7"
¥66,786
Includes any tariffs and taxes
Boar Hunt
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10.0" X 8.6"
¥64,509
Includes any tariffs and taxes
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Mughal Paintings & Art

The Mughal school of painting runs parallel to the Mughal dynasty. It came into prominence in the sixteenth century, during the reign of king Akbar. It reached its zenith under the patronage of Akbar’s grandson – king Jahangir. The reign of the latter’s successor king Shah Jahan saw its decline and finally under the unsympathetic Aurangzeb it breathed its last.


Indeed, as a school of art, the duration of Mughal painting was a limited one, extending only over approximately two and a half centuries. Actually, it has often been referred to as not exactly a school, but rather an exceptionally brilliant phase in Indian art. The roots of Mughal painting lay in Samarkand and Herat, where under the patronage of the Timurid kings, Persian art reached its apogee.


Babur, a descendant of Timur, and the founder of the Mughal dynasty, speaks of a person named ‘Bihzad’ as ‘a most eminent painter’. It was with the descendants of Bihzad and the deep personal interest taken by Akbar, the grandson of king Babur, that the Mughal school of art started off with a flourish. Regarding the aesthetics of Mughal painting, one exceptional feature is its commitment to realism or the delineation of likeness.


The subjects were majorly drawn from the extremely rich and magnificent court life under the Mughals. That this was a flourishing art during Akbar’s reign is borne out by the list of more than forty painters found in a book written during his era. However, it was under Akbar’s son Jehangir that Mughal painting gained its highest peaks.


Not only portraits and hunting scenes, but also scientific studies of botany and natural history found favor with the artists under the king’s support. The Mughal painters were asked to paint unusual specimens of flora and fauna in their exact likeness. Some of these skilfully painted pictures have survived till today, narrating to us the uniqueness of those rich times.


Under the reign of Shajahan, son of Jahangir, the Mughal school of painting entered its decline. The actual treatment of the subject matter is replaced with more decorative embellishments like rich flowery borders etc. Under Shahjahan architecture scaled new peaks (Taj Mahal etc.), but painting deteriorated. Finally, with the rise of Aurangzeb, Mughal painting breathed its last.


FAQs


Q1. What are the main features of Mughal art?

 

A distinct sense of naturalism in the composition separates Mughal art from other schools of Indian paintings, lending it a rich appearance and realism. An understanding of perception, depth, visual reality and a balance between hidden meaning and observable form in the composition are some other characteristics of Mughal artworks.

 

Q2. Why is Mughal art important?

 

Mughal art is praised worldwide for the degree of inspiration it draws from Indian culture and the subsequent impact it has on the regional artworks in India. As a school of painting that was patronized by the royal court, Mughal paintings are also a direct and unmatched source of history for the Mughal period and assist historians in understanding the socio-political and cultural context of medieval India from the 16th century to 19th century CE.

 

Q3. How did the Mughals contribute to art?

 

Coming from a religious context, i.e. Islam, where representing the human form was forbidden, the Mughals embraced the socio-cultural and artistic traditions of India, and this adaptability of the Mughals contributed to the emergence of a school of Indian painting, which was unique, aesthetically endowed and enriched by different artistic streams.


Inspired by the traditional Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain artworks, Persian art, and European elements, Mughal paintings grew into a formidable art form. Even when the Mughal court in Delhi weakened with the arrival of the British, the elements of Mughal paintings remained intact in the regional kingdoms where they mated with local art forms and birthed newer Indian regional styles, which have gained a huge fandom in the contemporary art world.