Akbar Hunting at Palam, near Delhi, by Narayan and Mukund
| Support Type: | Paper |
| Paint Type: | Gouache |
| Current Location: | Victoria and Albert Museum in London, United Kingdom |
This painting—it's a folio from the *Akbarnama* created around 1590 by Mukund and Narayan—captures this incredibly chaotic, crowded royal hunt. When you look at it, your eye just sort of jumps around because there is so much happening at once. The artists used a high perspective, like you are looking down from a hill, which lets them cram in dozens of figures, horses, and panicked animals all over the slope. Right in the middle of all the madness, Akbar himself is riding a dark, almost black horse, leaning forward to pierce a running deer with his spear. There are other hunters too, scattered across the grassy terrain on brown and light blue horses, closing in on the wildlife. You can see various kinds of deer and blackbucks darting in every direction, some leaping mid-air while others have already been struck down, their white bellies exposed. The ground itself is painted in soft tones of yellow, green, and beige, which makes the bright tunics of the hunters—reds, blues, oranges, and deep greens—really pop out. What is neat about the layout is how it is framed. At the very top, there is a cluster of buildings, maybe a village or an outpost near Delhi, nestled behind some trees. Then at the very bottom, a row of court attendants and onlookers are standing around, some holding sticks, others talking or watching the spectacle unfold. It really gives you a sense of the sheer scale of these imperial hunts, which were huge social events, not just quiet sport. Even though the composition is packed to the brim, the curved lines of the running animals and the horses give the whole scene a rhythmic, frantic kind of energy. The small Persian script at the bottom gives credit to the creators, grounding this wild, centuries-old chase right onto the historical page.
Sources:
