The crown addresses the animals
Image source: commons.wikimedia.org

The crown addresses the animals

Artist:Miskin
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Support Type: Paper
Paint Type: Gouache
Current Location: British Museum, London, UK
Location History:Removed from the album Stowe Or 16 (folio 16a). Originally purchased from Richard Grenville, 2nd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, through A E Evans OMPB Sons at Sotheby’s at the Stowe sale, 5-14.iii.1849/172.). Transferred from the the British Library's Department of Oriental Manuscripts and Printed Books ((OMPB) in 1920.

The Crow Addresses the Animals by Miskin, c. 1590-1620. This is a painting about the whole world assembled and the voice that dares to address it. The artist Miskin, named by Abu'l-Fazl among the seventeen master painters of Akbar's imperial atelier in the n-i Akbar, and the acknowledged sovereign of animal subjects within that studio, here extends his command across the totality of creation: terrestrial, aerial, aquatic, mythological, real. Every register of living and legendary being has been summoned to a mountain that rises like a spine through the centre of the composition, and at its narrow summit, barely visible against the deep lapis-blue of the sky, a dark crow or raven leans forward - the orator, the catalyst, the singular voice amid the chorus of the assembled. The medium is gouache, applied in dense, luminous layers over a prepared paper support, likely laminated sheets burnished to a firm, smooth surface before the initial drawing was laid in. Gold, either in leaf or liquid form, punctuates the work throughout: in the foliate border at the edge of the mount, in the highlights that run across fish scales in the watery foreground, in the sheen that lifts the feathers of the simurgh spiraling in flame-red and green through the upper right of the composition. The mountain itself is worked in pale greens, warm pinks, and ochres, its rocky crags built up through layered washes that suggest geological strata - a structure that Miskin renders with the same empirical attention he applies to fur and feather. The sky is a sustained cobalt, neither atmospheric nor perspectival in the European sense but assertive, declarative, the blue of illuminated authority pressing down from above upon the teeming assembly below. And that assembly is extraordinary. Reading the image from ground to peak is to traverse something close to a medieval cosmological diagram, except that it breathes. In the foreground pool, fish of several species drift in shallow water above a recognizable stone bed; beside them, turtles and small amphibians press against the lower margin. Above this aquatic register rises the terrestrial: a white spotted deer of spectral gentleness, a dappled piebald horse, a leopard cub with a face of concentrated alertness, a tiger whose orange and black is rendered with the brushwork of a naturalist who has looked carefully at live animals, not illustrations of them. A green dragon - scaled, taloned, entirely Timurid-Persian in iconographic lineage - coils through the lower left, its borrowed mythology at ease among the observed zoology around it. A lion and lioness rest mid-composition in a posture of watchful repose, their musculature built from graduated tones of warm ochre. To the right, a pink dragon of Chinese derivation twines through the rocky outcroppings, its scales articulated with fine gold-touched lines, a reminder that Mughal painting at this moment was not a closed system but a synthesis - Persian, Indian, Chinese, and beginning to absorb European naturalism through the Jesuit prints that had reached Akbar's court by the 1580s. In the upper register, the avian world takes over: vultures perch in a bare tree at the upper left, while cranes, herons, ducks, parrots, and unnamed birds wheel through the blue. The simurgh - mythical and sovereign among birds, the Persian phoenix - blazes in the upper right, its tail of red and orange unfurling like a second sun. The painting's literary ground is said to be the Anwār-i Suhaylī ('Lights of Canopus'), a Persian version of the Sanskrit Panchatantra commissioned by Akbar and composed by the Timurid author Ḥusayn Vāʿiẓ Kāshifī. The episode illustrated is likely the moment when the crow speaks out against the election of an owl as leader of the animals - a scene of political counsel delivered through fable, in which eloquence and reason are the weapons of the smaller against the powerful. Akbar's commissioning of this text was not incidental. Animal fable as a genre had been the norm for the princes since antiquity; to render it in paint was to turn moral philosophy into spectacle, to make the argument visible and memorable to an emperor who could not read. There is a deeper register still. Abu'l-Fazl records Akbar's conviction that a painter, in drawing any living being, must attend to every limb and yet know that only God can supply life - that painting is therefore a form of contemplation, a sustained encounter with the limits of the human hand before the divine act of creation. Miskin's painting does not merely illustrate a fable: it is itself a kind of visual theology, an enumeration of the living world in all its variety, gathered into a single, teeming, gold-edged field of attention. The crow speaks and the animals listen. While looking at the painting, we join that assembly - summoned, as they are, to attend to something urgent said from a great height.

Information Compiled by Jyotirmaya Samanta
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