| Support Type: | Paper |
| Paint Type: | Watercolor |
| Current Location: | Unknown |
| Location History: | Unknown |
Arshad Khan is understood as a late Mughal painter and official associated with the Deccan, a period where many artists worked within shifting regional courts and are not clearly documented, which makes direct attribution of works difficult. To understand the kind of visual language he may have engaged with, Jahangir Preferring a Sufi Shaikh to Kings by Bichitr can be considered as a representative example of Mughal court painting. The painting appears highly structured, with the central figure placed above the others, immediately creating a sense of hierarchy. The composition feels controlled and almost staged, with each figure positioned deliberately rather than naturally interacting. The use of gold and intricate detailing draws attention to the main figure, while the rest seem secondary despite their presence. There is very little sense of movement, which makes the scene feel frozen, focusing more on authority and order than realism. Since no confirmed paintings are directly attributed to Arshad Khan, this work helps situate his practice within the broader Mughal–Deccan tradition, where emphasis was placed on hierarchy, ornamentation, and controlled composition
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