| Support Type: | Paper |
| Paint Type: | Watercolor |
| Current Location: | Metropolitan Museum of Art |
| Location History: | Purchased- by the Metropolitan Museum of Art via Rogers Fund, 1955 Currently- Islamic Art Section, Metropolitan Museum of Art |
'Portrait of Islam Khan Mashhadi' ca. 17th century by Payag (ca. 1591–1658). The folio belongs to the 'Late Shah Jahan Album'- a dispersed manuscript that gathered over the last decade of the emperor's reign, between 1650 and 1658. Its portraits focus on the aged emperor's nobles, and each subject is characterized by the gravity of a career. Burnished gold and warmly luminescent covers the ground of the page. It is decorated with barely visible botanical motifs-narcissus, iris, plantain-pressed into the surface rather than applied with paint, a discreet background of ornamentation which does not distract from the figures depicted. Seven figures fill the margins against this background: three above the central portrait, three on its right-hand edge, and two below. These represent the individuals who formed Islam Khan's immediate world: those who waited on him, who armed him, who provided his sustenance. Three figures on the right hand edge are pictured at work: two are carrying large black circular shields, lacquered, with four gilded bosses in the center. This same type of shield appears three times and functions as an element in the formal description of a man identified with military service-here, an attribute that reinforces the meaning on a formal level, ensuring clarity rather than purely aesthetic appeal. Above the portrait, two figures kneel beside red trays which hold a black turban ornament and a spray of feathers. To the left of these two, a figure clothed in a dark green jami sits before his meal-food vessels arrayed on the ground, indicating that this is the material culture of power, the infrastructure of hospitality in a grand Mughal court. Below the portrait, two cross-legged men sit side by side. One, wearing a white flowered jama with a green sash, has an open document resting on the page before him, indicating his role in administration, while the younger man beside him, in yellow, manipulates a red ink box. These are the administrators, those who work in secretarial realms, enabling the functioning of a vizier. The central portrait is contained within its own rectangle: surrounded by an orange border that echoes the gold that flanks it-a repeat of flowers set against a gold background-a gold rule, then the painting itself. The painting is set on a celadon-colored ground, the sky above, graduated in shades of violet, mauve and blue, is broken by horizontal cloud patterns. Islam Khan is posed in three-quarter profile, looking to the left; he is an old man, his white beard thick and naturally arranged; his face conveys a sense of heaviness and maturity, its features solid and firm; his turban, a warm golden ochre, is wound skillfully, and his jami is a deepburnt sienna, decorated with gilded floral patterns that Payag conveys with a sense of substantiality and weight-you feel the stiffness of the material and the form of the man's body beneath it. His right hand is raised slightly, his fingers relaxed. This is not a gesture of blessing but an interrupted posture of conversation, or meditation, that conveys authority. His left arm holds his black circular shield close, its disc as wide as his torso, contrasting with the orange gold robe and the warm glow of the painting. A sword is sheathed at his left hip. He is posed standing on a strip of green ground dotted with flowers, a red tulip to his left and a white carnation to his right-these appear as conventional signposts, indicating a figure set against the background. To the left of the painting a Persian inscription in black nasta'liq script states the subject's identity-this is a common device in the Late Shah Jahan Album: the image itself assumes no knowledge of who the subject is and the text provides this crucial piece of information. The inscription is an integral part of the folio, an element that underscores the purpose of the album. Islam Khan Mashhadi served Shah Jahan as the governor of Bengal, then as Grand Vizier and then as governor of the Deccan; he held positions of considerable power throughout the 1630s and 40s and died in 1645 on the road to the assignment that was to be his last posting. The portrait was most likely created after Islam Khan's death or near its end, for the album's dates range from 1620–1657. It comprises portraits of important individuals of the court assembled post-hoc, forming a permanent visual record of those men who defined the Mughal court for the aging emperor. At its simplest, it is a testament to the men of substance and achievement who built and administered an empire, immortalized by gold and opaque watercolor.
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