A King Offers to Make Amends to a Bereaved Mother

Artist:Miskin
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Support Type: Paper
Paint Type: Gouache
Current Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Location History:The manuscript was commissioned for and produced in the famed library of the Mughal emperor Akbar, one of the greatest manuscript-collecting rulers in history. Akbar amassed an extensive library of some 20,000 beautifully illustrated and illuminated manuscripts. This Khamsa was one of the most magnificent productions of the early Mughal period. Its twenty-nine surviving illustrated folios were executed by twelve named court artists including Basawan, Manohar, Narsingh and Miskin, with calligraphy by Muhammad Husain al-Kashmiri, known as Zarin Qalam (Golden Pen). The manuscript was completed in 1597 to 1598, with total production time spanning from early 1596. The eight illustrated folios now at the Metropolitan Museum, including this one, were owned by Alexander Smith Cochran of Yonkers, New York. In March 1913, Cochran presented a collection of twenty Persian, two Eastern Turkish and two Arabic manuscripts to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This was described as one of the most generous early gifts to the Department of Islamic Art.The folio has remained at the Metropolitan Museum since the 1913 gift. The bulk of the text block and the painted lacquer binding from the same manuscript are held at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, which owns twenty-one paintings from the manuscript.

'A King Offers to Make Amends to a Bereaved Mother' is a Mughal miniature painting attributed to Miskin, produced between 1597 and 1598 as part of the Khamsa commissioned for Emperor Akbar's imperial library. It illustrates the thirteenth maqala of Amir Khusrau Dihlavi's Khamsa, a constant theme of Islamic courtly literature that exhorts sovereigns to heed their duty to rule with wisdom and unwavering justice. The painting narrates a specific moral episode from the text. A king has accidentally killed a shepherd boy while hunting. He submits himself to justice and appears before the boy's bereaved mother. He offers her a choice: she may take his sword and cut off his head, which will fall into the golden dish placed between them, or she may accept the second dish filled with gold as compensation. The scene captures the precise moment of this offer. The composition shows the king in a position of submission, unusual for royal portraiture in Mughal art where the emperor is ordinarily shown at the apex of a hierarchical arrangement. Here the dramatic reversal of power is the subject itself. The golden dish positioned between the king and the mother serves a dual compositional and narrative function, marking the moral weight of the choice being offered and anchoring the scene's spatial centre. The painting demonstrates the three-part stylistic synthesis that characterises the Khamsa manuscript as a whole and reflects Miskin's capacity to work across visual traditions simultaneously. Some of the marginal figures are of European inspiration, reflecting the influence of European printed books and engravings that had reached Akbar's court through Jesuit missionaries and merchants. The rocks in the landscape are Persian in treatment, following conventions established in 15th-century Timurid and Safavid manuscript painting. The main figures of the king and the bereaved mother are rendered in a typically Mughal mode, with naturalistic facial modelling, careful rendering of costume and the emotionally direct compositional relationship that distinguishes Akbari figure painting from its Safavid and Rajput contemporaries. This stylistic mixing is consistent with Miskin's known approach across his career. Miskin's creative talent came into play not only through the natural stimuli of his own culture but also in response to challenges of new orientations which were partly technical and partly exotic. His career can be seen not as a steady evolution but as a maturing technique applied to a series of orientations that were attuned to a greater or lesser degree to his own artistic aptitudes. The Khamsa of Amir Khusrau Dihlavi localises its model, the Khamsa of Nizami, by rooting several of the stories in an Indian idiom. Likewise, the illustrations made for Akbar's copy are set in typically Indian landscapes. This contextualisation was a deliberate editorial decision consistent with Akbar's broader cultural project of synthesis between Persian literary tradition and Indian experience. The moral subject of royal accountability and justice is central to the political theology of Mughal kingship. Jahangir later had a golden chain of justice hung from his palace, a real embodiment of the same principle illustrated here, so that any subject across the empire could ring it to attract the emperor's attention. This painting, produced under Akbar, represents that principle in its literary and pictorial form, making the manuscript not merely an aesthetic commission but a statement of imperial ideology. The choice to illustrate this specific episode, with the king on equal moral footing with a peasant woman, reflects the idealised vision of Mughal sovereignty as accountable and just, an image the court wished to project and preserve.

Sources:

Location source: metmuseum.org
Information Compiled by Swagata Bhandar Kayastha
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