Artwork Page for Raja Dilip Singh of Guler on a dais

Details / Information for Raja Dilip Singh of Guler on a dais

Raja Dilip Singh of Guler on a dais

c. 1707
Measurements
Image: 22.7 x 15.3 cm (8 15/16 x 6 in.); Overall: 27.1 x 19.8 cm (10 11/16 x 7 13/16 in.)
Public Domain
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He holds a manuscript, possibly referencing his court chronicle the Diliparanjani, completed in 1707.

Description

Dilip Singh (reigned 1695–1741) holds a manuscript page with alternating lines of red and black ink, which may be a sacred text that announces his devotion to the Hindu god Vishnu, whose mark appears on his forehead. He inaugurated the practice of commissioning paintings and manuscripts for the royal collection at Guler. Some members of a family of artists of Guler had worked in the Mughal imperial workshop in Lahore in present-day Pakistan. They brought a vision of naturalism and delicate refinement evident in the trees, his facial features, Mughal-style belted tunic, and carpet with floral patterns.
A vertically oriented gum tempera and gold painting depicts a man with light skin and a small earring seated cross-legged on a white dais in a yellow field. He wears a yellow and orange striped robe and a red cap while holding a small paper. To the left, a tall dark tree stands beside willow branches that arc across a dark sky. Birds fly nearby. A weathered red border frames the scene.

Raja Dilip Singh of Guler on a dais

c. 1707

Northern India, Pahari kingdoms

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