A COMPOSITE ELEPHANT
A COMPOSITE ELEPHANT
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE ENGLISH COLLECTION
A COMPOSITE ELEPHANT

DELHI SCHOOL, NORTH INDIA, CIRCA 1800

Details
A COMPOSITE ELEPHANT
DELHI SCHOOL, NORTH INDIA, CIRCA 1800
Opaque pigments heightened with gold on paper, a peri wearing gold illuminated robes and crown sits atop a large elephant made up of a tightly packed composition of human and animal figures, the elephant follows a blue div who parades before it carrying a bugle and snake, laid down between gold and polychrome rules on green borders with gold floral illumination, repaired split to centre left
Painting 7 5/8 x 9 3/8in. (19.4 x 23.8cm.); folio 8 7/8 x 11in. (22.5 x 28cm.)
Provenance
Christie's, London, 26 April 2012, lot 25

Brought to you by

Louise Broadhurst
Louise Broadhurst

Lot Essay

The tradition of composite animals stretches far back to early Buddhist manuscripts of Central Asia, which later made their way into Persian painting and subsequently into the artistic corpus of Northern and Central India. This present example of a composite elephant is similar to a miniature which sold at Christie's, New York, 20 March 2002, lot 144. Both miniatures share the same figure of the winged rider or peri as well as a demon preceding the elephant with a curved trumpet. Our miniature is more detailed than the New York example with a greater number of human figures intertwined into the composite body of the elephant. For a further discussion on composite animals in Mughal and Deccani painting see Barry, 2011, pp. 102-109.

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