Seated princess
| Support Type: | Paper |
| Paint Type: | Gouache |
| Current Location: | Freer Gallery of Art, Washington DC |
| Location History: | ?-1942 Henri Vever (1851-1942), method of acquisition unknown [1] 1942-1947 Jeanne Louise Monthiers (1861-1947), bequest of Henri Vever [2] 1947-1986 Francois Mautin (1907-2003), bequest of Jeanne Louise Monthiers and Henri Vever [3] From 1986 The National Museum of Asian Art, by purchased from Francois Mautin [4] |
Muhammad Murad Samarqandi, a portrait painter born in Samarqand and worked in Khante of Bukhara (modern-day Uzbekistan) between the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Operating at a time when Central Asia situated squarely between Safavid Iran and Mughal India, Samarqandi became famed for bucking stringent royal conventions to establish an idiosyncratic, highly individualistic style. During the heyday of the Mughal Empire, Muhammad Nadir Samarqandi and Muhammad Murad were among the final group of well-known foreign artists to depart Central Asia and secure high-level patronage in India.His contacts with the Mughal court had a significant impact on his art resulting in a distinctive conversation between Indian, Safavid and Central Asian creative traditions. Specifically Muhammad Murad is a romantic artist, although his romanticism is intensely dramatic and oriental rather than poetic. His creations perfectly capture the heroic essence of Firdawsi's epic poem. Instead of pleasant talk or court receptions, he selected subjects of harsh collisions for his pieces. The gory bat drama culminates in a depressing scene of grief over the hero and Siyavush on a horse burning in the fire while the noble hero Piran is pushed up to a rock. The outcome is still uncertain. The artist uses only a few characters in his creations but he places them so that they give the impression of multi-figured scenes because the calligrapher only left narrow blank strips on the folios at his disposal. Muhammad Murad exhibits powerful, occasionally angular and twisted outlines in contrast to the Behzadian miniaturists' fluid lines. His coloring of scenery, clothing and landscapes is expressive rather than organic. The artist uses surprising and abrupt color combinations, such as violet ground, fire-red boundaries of heaven and blue and pink horses. Muhammad Murad's miniatures' emotional quality was produced through art, which captures the intensity of passion and emotion that permeate the "Shah-nama" passages. The artwork ”Seated Princess” is a detached album folio from the Uzbek period (circa 1600), likely created in Bukhara. The division of labor between the two named artists is highly specific, Muhammad-Sharif Musawwir is directly credited with creating the inner painting. Muhammad Murad Samarqandi signed the elaborate border. In reality his signature is concealed within the piece, if we look at the bottom border, we see his name written directly on one of the painted rocks: "the work of Muhammad Murad Samarqandi." A crowned princess is shown holding a cup while sitting gracefully on a golden throne in the central panel. A vibrant group of children or tiny figures are playing and engaging with her if we look closely at her lap and the area surrounding her feet. The Marginal Illustrations (Margina), Bukhara and Samarqand painters of this era were known for their intricate, busy border surrounding the primary frame. It is full of extraordinarily realistic vignettes, such as professors or dervishes speaking, slaves carrying vessels, musicians playing instruments (such as the oud or tanbur at the top left) and beautiful, stylized natural elements like rocky terrain and flowering trees. It is a magnificent example of late Central Asian miniature painting that combines regional characteristics with Persianate influences. The "Composite" Robe's Illusion, The princess's attire is the most crucial element for an art history endeavor. It is a composite design composed completely of interlocking figures, primarily little men, children and a few animals crammed closely together, rather than merely a pattern. During the 15th and 16th centuries, this composite drawing technique was very well-liked throughout Iran and Central Asia. According to academics, these intertwining figures traditionally had profound talismanic (magical or protective) connotations.The Museum curators and historians observe that the disorderly, crowded figures that make up the princess's clothing may visually represent an ecstatic, hallucinogenic vision brought on by the wine because the princess is holding a wine cup and sporting a faint smile. One of this folio's most thought-provoking features is the golden creatures lurking in the backdrop clouds. Background features in Persian and Central Asian paintings are frequently deeply meaningful rather than merely decorative. We notice that the white, whirling clouds right above and behind the princess's head are stylized in a ribbon-like manner called “tchi” a visual pattern that is largely taken from Chinese art. A golden lion/leopard-like creature may be seen on the right of these clouds, while on the left are remnants of a legendary bird known as the Simurgh (or Chinese phoenix/fenghuang). In Islamic art, the lion stands for worldly strength, monarchy, and occasionally danger, whereas the Simurgh symbolizes the divine, protection, and ultimate spiritual wisdom. The placement of these animals is crucial. They are not roaming in a realistic world or a landscape, they are rather confined to the stylized, heavenly sky backdrop directly framing the princess’s head. This folio has a lovely thematic tension intended to draw the viewer's attention. Despite being small, the figures that make up her clothing are entirely harmonized and serene.The fierce, aggressive animals (such as the golden leopard/lion figure) that loom menacingly in the background just above her head stand in stark contrast to this.In the meantime, Samarqandi's outside border, which features elite, commonplace pleasures like an outdoor feast, dervishes speaking and musicians playing stringed instruments, roots the mystical central vision.
