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May-June 2005
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Art of the Hunt |
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| This detail of the colorfully habited armed forces, and the other details below, give some indication of the meticulous rendering of the folio. | ![]() |
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In the foreground of the painting huntsmen parade attributes of the royal hunt. At left, a servant holds aloft a golden battle-axe. He is followed by swordsmen and archers and other members of a nobleman’s hunting cortegea falcon carried by the falconer (below, left) on his delightfully dappled horse, a hound, and a cheetah wearing a green cape (below, right). Hounds and falcons often hunted in concert, says Masteller. The falcon would select and stoop onto the quarry and the hounds would bring it down. |
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Below: Sujan Singh [reigned 1700-1735] and Ladies Shooting Heron from a Terrace. Rajasthan, India, circa 1710. Opaque watercolor, gold, and metallic pigments on paper. 12 1/5 by 8 2/3 inches.
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From his terrace, Sujan Singh has already shot one of the herons circling lyrically above his lovely garden, and an attendant has picked up the bleeding bird.
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A hunting companion beside the prince points at the quarry as he takes aim. An attendant holds a royal standard; another is ready to whisk away flies. In style the painting resembles works from the Mughal courtrefined, naturalistic, gracious. |
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“It’s a connoisseur’s painting. Its power is subtle,” says Masteller. “It is lacy and delicate, done with a loving hand and light colors. It’s so sweetuntil you look at what they’re doing to those herons.” The painting, she notes, presents a strong contrast to the one reproduced below, which is “bold and in your face. The two pictures show the range and breadth of Indian painting of the period.” They do share a conspicuous artistic convention. “Profiles were considered appropriate for portraiture,” says Masteller. “People shown frontally tended to be low-ranking, perhaps servants.” |
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Below: Maharana Bhim Singh of Udaipur [reigned 1778-1828] Returns from a Boar Hunt. Rajasthan, India, circa 1810. Opaque watercolor, gold, and silver metallic pigment on paper. 11 by 15 inches.

[Click to view larger version of this painting ]
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The haloed Maharana Bhim Singh fortunately has bagged some boars. “In the Hindu tradition,” explains Calderwood intern Rajeshwari Shah, “the king’s bountiful catch foretold that the kingdom could expect a fruitful year ahead.” The king wears a green garment associated with the spring hunt, when boars are the quarry in Rajasthan, she says. |
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The sun-faced royal standard carried by an attendant is “a symbol of the Mewar family, who are conceived of as descendants of the sun.” Note the attendant carrying a gold hookah for the pleasure of the king. Saluki hounds (below, left) and falcons (below, right) were frequent participants in Indian game hunts. |
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| The picture shows the stratification of the group, notes Masteller, with the king on his finely clothed horse and attendants of descending levels of rank on foot: “Together, they make a royal portrait.” Faces with an iconic, almost stamplike quality and outlined figures, she says, are conventions of paintings from this time and place. “How do you get all those colors of green to work together?” she marvels. “No art student would dare attempt it.” | ![]() |