This article explores the artistic relationship between Western European Renaissance art and Mughal painting ca. 1630s at the ateliers in North India. A central theme is the employment of European painterly modes in the Mughal visual tradition that expressed male-male intimacy, carnal desire, and emotional attachment. In particular, the article focuses on the work of the Mughal painter Govardhan, who illustrated the opening scene of Sa‘dī’s Gulistan (Rose Garden). Govardhan built upon sixteenth-century European compositional elements and the themes of Noli me tangere and the Doubting Thomas to form subtle yet unmistakable allusions to male-male sexuality. Cet article explore les relations artistiques entre l’art de la Renaissance européen...
Item does not contain fulltextIn Perilous Order Shahzia Sikander brought together several images fro...
One of the most remarkable artistic achievements of the Mughal Empire was the emergence in the early...
The article examines Daniel Mytens’s portrait of Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel, and the pendant por...
This article explores the artistic relationship between Western European Renaissance art and Mughal ...
The Mughal Emperor Akbar and his court are known for a tolerant religious policy and a general openn...
The Mughal Emperor Akbar and his court are known for a tolerant religious policy and a general openn...
Akbar died in 1605 and was succeeded by his son, Prince Selim, who took the name of Jahangir, or Wor...
The Indian Subcontinent has contained a vast array of innumerable ethnicities, cultures, traditions ...
The article analyses the revolutionary impact of the processes of mechanical reproduction on artisti...
This work follows the rise and expansion of the Mughal Empire in India from the 16th to the early 18...
Cet ouvrage a pour objet l’étude de différents peintres moghols ayant exercé leur activité au XVIII°...
In this article, we propose a review of the historiography of a famous early medieval Indian sculptu...
Paintings of women as individual subjects were a popular theme in the Mughal court during the mid-se...
Even though the biographies and stylistic hands of individual Mughal court painters have been a cent...
The reign of Abū al-Fath Jalāl al-Dīn Muhammad Akbar (1556–1605) was a fruitful period of the politi...
Item does not contain fulltextIn Perilous Order Shahzia Sikander brought together several images fro...
One of the most remarkable artistic achievements of the Mughal Empire was the emergence in the early...
The article examines Daniel Mytens’s portrait of Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel, and the pendant por...
This article explores the artistic relationship between Western European Renaissance art and Mughal ...
The Mughal Emperor Akbar and his court are known for a tolerant religious policy and a general openn...
The Mughal Emperor Akbar and his court are known for a tolerant religious policy and a general openn...
Akbar died in 1605 and was succeeded by his son, Prince Selim, who took the name of Jahangir, or Wor...
The Indian Subcontinent has contained a vast array of innumerable ethnicities, cultures, traditions ...
The article analyses the revolutionary impact of the processes of mechanical reproduction on artisti...
This work follows the rise and expansion of the Mughal Empire in India from the 16th to the early 18...
Cet ouvrage a pour objet l’étude de différents peintres moghols ayant exercé leur activité au XVIII°...
In this article, we propose a review of the historiography of a famous early medieval Indian sculptu...
Paintings of women as individual subjects were a popular theme in the Mughal court during the mid-se...
Even though the biographies and stylistic hands of individual Mughal court painters have been a cent...
The reign of Abū al-Fath Jalāl al-Dīn Muhammad Akbar (1556–1605) was a fruitful period of the politi...
Item does not contain fulltextIn Perilous Order Shahzia Sikander brought together several images fro...
One of the most remarkable artistic achievements of the Mughal Empire was the emergence in the early...
The article examines Daniel Mytens’s portrait of Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel, and the pendant por...