Akbar with Lion and Calf
Image source: en.wikipedia.org

Akbar with Lion and Calf

Artist:Govardhan
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Support Type: Paper
Paint Type: Gouache
Current Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Met)

The portrait of Akbar with a Lion and a Calf, commissioned by Shah Jahan to celebrate the Mughal dynasty’s imperial lineage and Akbar’s legacy, was painted by Govardhan, an artist whose career extended across the reigns of Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan. The most striking feature of this painting is the incorporation of European artistic elements into the miniature painting tradition of the Mughals. The serene European landscape in the background and the winged cherubs serenading and crowning the haloed Akbar emblematise his rule sanctioned by heaven while also highlighting the influence of European artistic traditions brought to the Mughal court by Jesuit missionaries and trade networks. Govardhan reinterprets this Christian imagery by modifying the lion and the lamb motif taken from the Bible, and replacing the lamb with a calf to make it culturally resonant with the Mughal court. The focal point of the painting is the peaceful coexistence of the lion and the calf, two enemies in the real world living harmoniously under the benign rule of Akbar. Their relationship reflects the social harmony under his rule. The lion serves as a metaphor for royal power, authority, and strength and the calf symbolises innocence, vulnerability, and peace. This imagery alludes to Akbar’s policy of Sulh-i-kul (universal peace), his alliances with Hindu rulers, and his efforts to foster religious tolerance across the Mughal empire. The lion symbolises Akbar himself- majestic and powerful, yet exercising his authority with restraint, justice, and wisdom thereby ensuring that even the vulnerable, represented by the calf, may live in peace under his reign.

Information Compiled by Suhani Srivastava
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