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Prince and Ladies in a Garden by Nidha Mal

Artist:Nidha Mal
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Support Type: Paper
Paint Type: Watercolor
Current Location: Metropolitan Museum of Art (Department of Islamic Art), New York, USA
Location History:The painting was originally created in Lucknow, India. It was then in the collection of Terence McInerney in New York until 2001. It was then sold to the MMA (Metropolitan Museum of Art). The Princes and Painters in Mughal Delhi, 1707–1857" artwork was then displayed in the Asia Society exhibition in New York from February 7, 2012 to May 6, 2012.

Nidha Mal was an active underrated painter in the mid-18th century. His journey as an artist commenced in the Mughal court in Delhi under the rule of Emperor Muhammad Shah. Nidha Mal’s career overlapped with the “Muhammad Shahi Revival” of refined aesthetics and an increased naturalistic touch in paintings. Nidha Mal then migrated to Lucknow upon Muhammad Shah’s death in 1748, where he served the courts of Nawab Safdar Jang and Nawab Shuja al-Daula. His paintings were highly spoken for their elegant figures, portraiture, court entertainment scenes, and detailed compositions in architectural settings. He had the magic touch for balancing compositions, and the ability to portray the sophistication and leisure of the aristocratic society. The painting “Prince and Ladies in a Garden” is a mid-18th century painting from Lucknow, India. It follows an Islamic painting style— ink, opaque watercolour, and gold on paper. The artwork features an idealised moment of courtly leisure, depicting the unison of the beloved (ma'shūq) and lover (āshiq). There is a South Asian philosophy explaining the emotional essence that arises within the viewer— rasa. ‘Rasa’ means taste, essence, or sentiment. In this scenario, we see the prince and his consort engaging in a enjoyable moment of huqqa surrounded by their servants and attendants in an enclosed palace garden. Mal has painted this piece in a way that it evokes the ‘sringara rasa’, the mood of love and romantic sentiment. The scene of desire is wrapped in a sober, balanced compositional structure. Nidha Mal has quite thoughtfully created the terrace setting for this scene through a variety of spatial conventions. There is a white wall on the right starts decsending, suggesting the viewers that the couple is in a private garden space bordered by structural architecture and not present in any open arena. In historic and in artistic traditions, the gardens were a symbolic setting for romantic meetings and aristocratic social gatherings because they were considered “appropriate” based on their environment and ambience. Similarly, “Prince and Ladies in a Garden” frames the theme of attraction and intimacy within a socially acceptable atmosphere, the servants and attendants acting as chaperones. This work is a representation of the evolution of Mughal painting style with its fine brushstrokes and a delicate colour palette while bringing forward the acts of leisure and romance as per the tastes of locals. A composition celebrating grace, intimacy, and cultivated pleasure.

Sources:

Description Sources: metmuseum.org, metmuseum.org
Location source: metmuseum.org
Location History: metmuseum.org
Information Compiled by Ragini Shete
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