A Jain pilgrimage painting depicting the roads to Vimalanath and Parsvanath Jaipur, circa 1800gouache and gold on paper, nagari inscriptions on painted surface, yellow and red borders 498 x 797 mm.Footnotes:ProvenancePrivate UK collection since approximately the 1970s.For a 19th Century panel in white marble in the Victoria and Albert Museum, depicting Jain pilgrimage in a similar fashion, see P. Pal, The Peaceful Liberators: Jain Art from India, Los Angeles 1994, p. 67, fig. 44, and p. 254, cat. 118. For the importance of pilgrimage in the Jain religion generally, see pp. 66-74.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
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A rare South Indian steel sword probably Madras, mid-16th Centurythe double edged steel blade of tapering form, the forte in the form of a long palmette, the upcurved guard of ovoidal form, the grip of ribbed form with raised band to centre, the pommel of bud form with loose fitting pointed quatrefoil surround 95.5 cm. longFootnotes:Similar swords are in the British Museum (inv. nos. 293376 and 096145) and in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (inv. no. 36.25.1324), see Robert Elgood, Hindu Arms And Ritual, 2004, p. 89, pls. 8.35-36. For a further very similar example formerly in the Anthony North Collection, see Thomas Del Mar In association with Sotheby's, Antique Arms, Armour & Militaria, 30 June 2010, lot 87; and Robert Hales, Islamic And Oriental Arms And Armour, 2013, p. 190, no. 454.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Mughal Spinel retailed by Ganeshi Lall & Son India, 17th Centurythe spinel of ovoid form, later gold suspension loops to top and bottom issuing from rosette finials, in fitted box 2.8 x 2.2 cm. max; 62 ctFootnotes:ProvenanceGaneshi Lall & Son, Cairo, 1934, where it was mounted as an Art Deco style cockatoo brooch.Uncut spinels, such as the present lot, were prized by the Mughals as well as their Timurid ancestors and Safavid cousins, for their impressive size, rich colour and abundant variety of beautiful, naturally occurring forms. The finest examples were often inscribed with the names of rulers as tangible symbols of wealth and power. A spinel inscribed with the names of Jahangir (reg. 1605-27), Shah Jahan (reg. 1628-58) and Awrangzeb (reg.1658-1707) was presented to Edward VII in 1901 by Raja Sir Hira Singh of Nabha and remains in the Royal Collection (RCIN 11526). Another inscribed example, known as the Carew spinel, is in the Victoria & Albert Museum (IM.243-1922). A magnificent spinel, diamond and pearl necklace now in the collection of the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha, combines three spinel beads engraved with the names of Akbar (reg. 1556-1605), Jahangir and Shah Jahan, with eight uninscribed beads of the same size and approximate shape, demonstrating how spinels without inscriptions were also highly valued for their place in spectacular jewellery settings (see Leng Tan et al., Jewelled Treasures from the Mughal Courts, 2002, pp. 26-31, cat. no. 6). Though our spinel is not inscribed by a Timurid ruler or a Mughal emperor, it has its own fascinating and rather more recent story to tell, having once been mounted as a brooch in the 1930s by world renowned jewellers Ganeshi Lall & Son. Ganeshi Lall & Son was established in 1845 and had emporiums in Agra, Calcutta and the fashionable hill resort of Shimla, where the upper echelons of British society went to escape the heat of the plains. The Cairo shop was opened in 1934 in a highly prized position opposite Egypt's leading and most celebrated Shepheard's Hotel, whose illustrious guests included the Aga Khan, the Maharajah of Jodpur, Winston Churchill and Hollywood royalty such as Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A rare South Indian steel rapier probably Madras, early 17th Centurythe double-edged European steel blade with single fuller to upper end, the circular guard with central ridge, the quillons in the form of peacocks, the forte in the form of a palmette, the pommel of cupped form filled with weighted sphere surmounted by smaller spherical pommel, loose fitting circular copper rattles between the two spheres 130 cm. longFootnotes:For a similar example of this rare type of sword see P. Missillier and H. Rickets, Splendeur des Armes Orientales, Paris, 1988, p. 77. no. 120. Another is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (no. 36.24.1424).For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A princess dressed in male costume, wearing a gold-buttoned jama tied with an embroidered patka and a purple turban trimmed with fur and feathers, standing in a landscape holding a wine cup and bottle Mughal, second half of the 18th Centurygouache and gold on paper, laid down on an album page with pink and gilt-decorated borders, verso, a page from an Arabic book of sayings, copied by Sayyid Husain, dated AH 1141/AD 1728-29, written in nine lines of naskhi script in black ink, green and blue borders painting 197 x 97 mm.; calligraphic page 165 x 120 mm.; album page 340 x 235 mm.Footnotes:ProvenanceBonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 15th April 2010, lot 342.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A pair of silver-gilt rosewater sprinklers India, possibly Lucknow, 19th Centuryof tall slender form on hexagonal feet, the bodies of rounded form with flattened sides, the necks in the form of confronting elephant heads with trunks intertwined, the spouts in the form of floral sprays, decorated in repoussé with elaborate floral motifs, the shoulders and feet with acanthus leaves, the bodies with lion heads, the sides with peris, each with engraved inscription to one 35.3 cm. high; total weight 1217 g.(2)Footnotes:Long necked bottles, such as the present lot, are used to sprinkle rosewater (gulab) on and around guests at both social and ceremonial or religious functions, the custom often indicating a mark of favour or hospitality. They had their origins in Persia but became popular throughout the Mughal Empire. The Emperor Jahangir (1605-27) refers to the custom in his memoirs, stating, 'the assembly of gulab-pashi (sprinkling of rose water) took place; from former times this has been known as ab-pashi (water sprinkling) and has become established from amongst customs of former days' (quoted in M. Zebrowski, Gold, Silver and Bronze from Mughal India, London, 1997, p.69).For a similar pair of silver-gilt rosewater sprinklers sold in these rooms, see Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art Including the Lion and the Sun, Art from Qajar Persia, 30 April 2019, lot 155.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A fine south Indian copper-hilted steel dagger (bichuwa) probably Tanjore, 16th/ 17th Centurythe double-edged steel blade of curved form with raised central spine and widening towards the point, the copper hilt with thin grip overlaid with rosette to the centre, the handguard in the form of a two-headed bird, the feathered tails and serpentine necks intertwined, the makara heads clutching elephants, palmettes at the forte, the pommel in the form of a crown with bud finial 31.5 cm. longFootnotes:The handguard of the present lot incorporates the gandabherunda, a legendary bird in Hindu mythology usually depicted clutching elephants in its beaks to demonstrate its immense magical strength. The Gold varaha and half varaha coins from the reign of Achyuta Deva Raya, who ruled the Vijayanagara Empire between 1530 and 1542, depict the same mythical beast clutching elephants. The Wodeyars of Mysore also adopted the symbol during the reign of Raja Wodeyar (1578-1617). A similar but less fine bichuwa is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (Accession No. 36.25.779), whilst a fine gem-set example is illustrated in Robert Hales, Islamic and Oriental Arms and Armour, Farnham, 2013, p. 54, no. 54.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An unusual silver-gilt betel container in the form of a sitar Oudh, 19th Centuryin the form of a sitar with two hinged doors opening to reveal four compartments in the neck and one in the body, the kaddu with large repoussé foliate decoration and engraved undulating vines, the tabli with engraved floral and foliate motifs, the neck terminating in a swan, highlighted with gilt decoration, gilt interior, copper strings, mounted 50 cm. long; 1225 g.Footnotes:PublishedPratapaditya Pal et al., Dancing to the Flute: Music and Dance in Indian Art, Sydney, 1997, pp. 193-6, no. 117.ExhibitedArt Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, June 12 - August 24, 1997. The elegantly curved swan at the top of the sitar's neck alludes to the hamsa, the vehicle of Sarasvati, goddess of music and the arts. The word hamsa has a further musical connotation, in that its two syllables ham and sa are considered to be the sounds of inhalation and exhalation.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A fine Mughal style gem-set gold spoon Indiawith shallow rounded bowl, the multifaceted handle of tapering form terminating in a domed finial, profusely engraved and inlaid with diamonds, rubies, emeralds and paste to each side with floral interlace, the top of the handle with perching parakeets, gold tested as 23 carat, in fitted box 21 cm. long; 202 g. Footnotes:ProvenanceThe Al Thani Collection.PublishedAmin Jaffer and Amina Taha-Hussein Okada, From the Great Mughals to the Maharajahs, Paris, 2017, p. 270, no. 202.Tesori dei Moghul e Maharaja. La Collezione Al Thani, exh. cat., The Doge's Palace, Venice, 2018, pp. 286-87, no. 199.Amin Jaffer (ed.), Treasures from the Al Thani Collection, vol. 1, Beijing, 2018, p. 303, no. 203.ExhibitedFrom the Great Mughals to the Maharajahs, Grand Palais, Paris, 29 March - 5 June, 2017.Treasures of the Mughals and the Maharajahs, The Doge's Palace, Venice, 9 September 2017 - 3 January 2018.Treasures from the Al Thani Collection, The Palace Museum, Beijing 2018, 17 April 2018 - 18 June 2018. This spoon recalls ceremonial spoons of the Mughal empire. Their form had a European influence, however the use of the purest gold (kundan) in order to set the stones is indigenous and seemingly unique. The soft gold is refined into strips of tacky foil which are cut and folded, then applied without the need for a further adhesive. A ceremonial spoon of similar form is in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (IM.173-1910). For another example sold at Sotheby's see Arts of the Islamic World, 6 April 2011, lot 361. It is not known what the exact use of these kinds of ceremonial spoons was, however it has been suggested that they were made to distribute sweets over which the Fatiha had been recited, conveying blessings (see S. Cary Welch, India: Art and Culture, 1300-1900, catalogue for the exhibition held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 14 September 1985- 5 January 1986, p.200, no.128).Lot to be sold without reserve.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A fine Mughal style gem-set gold dagger hilt Indiathe grips of curved flaring form with bifurcated pommel, the cross-guards of waisted form terminating in domed quillons, profusely inlaid to each side with rubies forming a scale design overlaid with emeralds of floral and foliate form, the sides of the grips with emerald bands, the ends of the quillons with diamonds, gold tested as 23 carat, in fitted box 14.8 cm. long; 344 g.Footnotes:ProvenanceThe Al Thani Collection. PublishedAmin Jaffer and Amina Taha-Hussein Okada, From the Great Mughals to the Maharajahs, Paris, 2017, pp. 268-9, no. 200.Tesori dei Moghul e Maharaja. La Collezione Al Thani, exh. cat., The Doge's Palace, Venice, 2018, p. 285, no. 196. Amin Jaffer (ed.), Treasures from the Al Thani Collection, vol. 1, Beijing, 2018, p. 301, no. 200.ExhibitedFrom the Great Mughals to the Maharajahs, Grand Palais, Paris, 29 March - 5 June, 2017.Treasures of the Mughals and the Maharajahs, The Doge's Palace, Venice, 9 September 2017 - 3 January 2018.Treasures from the Al Thani Collection, The Palace Museum, Beijing 2018, 17 April 2018 - 18 June 2018. Inspired by Mughal pieces of the 17th Century, when jewelled daggers were reserved for the emperor and imperial family as well as for gifts indicating royal favour, the present lot is exquisitely fashioned after the cloven-pommel type. Hilts of this type were probably originally formed of two separate pieces of nephrite or ivory, the grip plaques of which protruded, thus culminating in a split pommel. They may also have been inspired by 'eared-daggers', which originated in Spain. These kinds of bifurcated hilts first appear in paintings from the 1620s depicting the Mughal emperor Jahangir (r. 1605-27), who is himself shown wearing or receiving such a dagger, for example in the Padshanamah (Folsach, Meyer and Wandel, Fighting, Hunting, Impressing: Arms and Armour from the Islamic World, 1500-1850, Denmark, 2021, p.236). An example of this kind of hilt can be found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (1984.332), forming part of a dagger that belongs to a group of jewelled gold objects likely made in the court workshops of Jahangir (D. G. Alexander, Islamic Arms and Armour in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2015, pp. 206-207). A further example is within the British Museum (2001,0521.35).For two more examples see S. Kaoukji, Precious Indian Weapons and other Princely Accoutrement, London, 2017, pp. 130-137, cat. 41 and 42. The intricate, imbricated design of the ruby gem settings combined with emerald accents is also reminiscent of the decoration on a 16th/17th Century staff handle found in the same publication, cat. 174.Lot to be sold without reserve.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A fine Mughal style gem-set gold tulwar hilt Indiathe circular pommel of slightly convex form with central domed boss held in place by screw with domed finial, the cross-guards of flaring form, profusely engraved and inlaid with rubies, emeralds and paste to each side with floral interlace, the cross-guards with fish-scale design, gold tested as 21-23 carat, in fitted box 16.5 cm. long; 316 g.Footnotes:ProvenanceThe Al Thani Collection.PublishedAmin Jaffer and Amina Taha-Hussein Okada, From the Great Mughals to the Maharajahs, Paris, 2017, pp. 268-9, no. 201.Tesori dei Moghul e Maharaja. La Collezione Al Thani, exh. cat., The Doge's Palace, Venice, 2018, p. 286, no. 197.Amin Jaffer (ed.), Treasures from the Al Thani Collection, vol. 1, Beijing, 2018, p. 301, no. 201.ExhibitedFrom the Great Mughals to the Maharajahs, Grand Palais, Paris, 29 March - 5 June, 2017.Treasures of the Mughals and the Maharajahs, The Doge's Palace, Venice, 9 September 2017 - 3 January 2018.Treasures from the Al Thani Collection, The Palace Museum, Beijing 2018, 17 April 2018 - 18 June 2018. This hilt follows in the tradition of those found on a typically Indian sword known as a tulwar, depictions of which can be found on wall paintings such as those in the Ajanta caves, dating to the 5th Century. Hilts of the type after which the present lot is fashioned appear frequently in paintings from the reign of Emperor Jahangir, indicating his reign to be the origin of this form. For further discussion see S. Kaoukji, Precious Indian Weapons and other Princely Accoutrement, London, 2017. Our tulwar hilt matches the work of the High Mughal period. The Mughal period embodied a fascination with nature, with Emperor Jahangir particularly expressing a keen interest, being an animal lover and student of natural history; the details and designs of flowers in the surface of hilts, as seen beautifully replicated in the present lot, are often recognisable as individual species. For further discussion see W. Blunt, 'The Mughal Painters of Natural History', The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 90, No. 539, Feb 1948, pp. 48-50. Comparable jewelled lotus flower designs can be found on the pommel of a dagger in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (1984.332).Lot to be sold without reserve.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A large and impressive panoramic view of the city of Lahore Punjab, Lahore, circa 1840-45watercolour with some gold on paper, 11 separate joined sheets of paper, identifying inscriptions in Persian on painted surface, in mount, framed 24 x 235 cm.Footnotes:The two peaks of Lahore's fortune as a great city were first under the early Mughal emperors, until the death of Aurangzeb, when it was adorned with palaces, gardens and tombs; and second, the period of Maharajah Ranjit Singh, the acme of Sikh power, from his triumphant entrance into the city in 1799 and the establishment of his regime, to the collapse of Sikh rule in the years after his death, and British control of the Punjab. Between those two events it had been captured twice, first by the Persian Nadir Shah, in his catastrophic invasion of India in 1739, and then again by the Afghan Ahmad Shah Durrani.In 1831 the British political officer and traveller, Alexander Burnes, capturing something of the ancient nature of the city, and its various layers of history, wrote:On the morning of June 18th we made our public entrance into the Imperial city of Lahore, which once rivalled Delhi. We moved among its ruins [...] In our evening at Lahore, we had many opportunities of viewing this city. The ancient capital extended from east to west for a distance of five miles, and an average breadth of three, as may yet be traced by the ruins. The mosques and tombs, which have been more stably built than the houses, remain in the midst of fields and cultivation as caravanserais for the travellers. The modern city occupies the western angle of the ancient capital, and is encircled by a strong wall. The houses are very lofty, and the streets, which are narrow, offensively filthy, from a gutter that passes through the centre. (Travels into Bokhara, London 1834).The city was first of all drawn by various European artists, including Frances ('Fanny') Eden (1801-1841), sister of the more famous Emily Eden, who recorded sketching it in her diary for December 1838 (so roughly contemporary with our painting). However, the European doctor, Martin Honigberger, who was in Lahore at the Sikh court between 1829 and 1833, and then again between 1839 to 1849, recorded that he sold a panorama of Lahore by an Indian artist to the Russian painter Prince Alexis Soltykoff. Honigberger apparently took home similar paintings, since in his illustrated memoir Thirty-Five Years in the East (1852) he included lithograph views based on them (see F. S. Aijazuddin, Lahore: Illustrated Views of the 19th Century, 1991, pp. 48-49, no. 15). Woodcut versions, apparently derived from such paintings, but in a much more naive style, were also being produced in the latter half of the 19th Century: for an example, see F. S. Aijazuddin, op. cit., 1991, pp. 84-85, no. 39. At a similar date, panoramas of Delhi, and other highly detailed topographical studies of the city, were being produced by artists such as Mazhar Ali Khan, at the tail end of Mughal power, and Mughal art (for which see J. P. Losty, 'Depicting Delhi: Mazhar Ali Khan, Thomas Metcalfe, and the Topographical School of Delhi Artists', in W. Dalrymple, Y. Sharma (edd.), Princes and Painters in Mughal Delhi 1707-1857, New York 2012, pp. 52-59.)For another example of such a panorama, see Christie's, Arts of India, 10th June 2015, lot 101 (previously at Sotheby's, Exotica: East Meets West, 1500-1900, 25th May 2005, lot 139), which appeared in the exhibition Interaction of Cultures: Indian and Western Paintings 1780-1910, The Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, 1998, cat. no. 71 (pp. 278-80). For a smaller example from a similar viewpoint, see Christie's, Art of the Islamic and Indian World, 4th October 2012, lot 221.An example of similar size with both English and Persian inscriptions is in the Singh Toor Collection: for a good discussion, along with a survey of the locations and buildings depicted, see D. Singh Toor, In Pursuit of Empire: Treasures from the Toor Collection of Sikh Art, London 2018, pp. 96-101.The monuments identified identified in the inscriptions include (ten have not been fully deciphered):The Shah's tower.The Tower of Rajah Ranjit Singh, construction of which began in 1839, not completed until 1851.The Shah's Tower of Yakki Gate.The Royal (Padshahi) Samman Tower.The Black Gate.The Gate of Light (Roshnai Gate) (illuminated at night).The White (Jasmine) Gate of Jawahir Singh Jiv.The Masti Gate.The Kashmiri Gate (facing in the direction of Kashmir).The Khizri Gate.The Royal (Padshahi) Mosque.The Old Mosque.The Mosque of Vazir Khan.The Hazuri Garden. The Mazhar 'Ali small garden.The Royal Summerhouse.The Sleeping quarter.The Large Sleeping quarter.The Mansion of [...] Nau Nihal Singh Jiv.The Mansion of Sardar Thij [?] Singh.The Mansion of the officer of the army, Khoshhal Singh.The Mansion of Sardar Ahlu Waliyah [?]. The Mansion of Sardar [...] Singh.The Arsenal [?] of Mazhar 'Ali.The Akbari District.The Akbari stable.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Maharajah Ranjit Singh on horseback with attendants and sepoys Punjab, Lahore, probably from the workshop of Imam Bakhsh Lahori, circa 1830-40gouache and gold on paper, orange and pink borders 289 x 228 mm.Footnotes:Maharajah Ranjit Singh was known as a natural horseman and his love of horses was legendary. He expended considerable sums to maintain a large stable of Arabian thoroughbreds. It was a common saying that the price of the entire city of Lahore was equal to the cost of the Sikh king's horses.The two soldiers that form part of the guard in this painting are men of the infantry, an arm of the Fauj-i-ain or regular army. The Maharajah's meritocratic character and pragmatic approach towards realising his ambitions in the early days of his empire-building career led him to create a modern army made up of all manner of warrior tribes and nations. Hindu Gurkhas, Biharis and Oriyas, as well as Muslim Punjabis and Pathans, were skilfully blended together with the Sikhs to form 19th Century Asia's most formidable fighting force. While his generals were all members of Punjab's new nobility, the men were drilled and marshalled by several dozen foreigners. They included former Napoleonic generals and English deserters from the ranks of the East India Company. Along with Italian, American, Spanish, German, Irish and Greek soldiers of fortune, all contributed to the new army's uniquely cosmopolitan fusion of military cultures. Taking the regular infantry as an example, Ranjit Singh made sure he hand-picked each man. These recruits would be drilled using French words of command.In this Europeanised army, each soldier was given a red jacket every two years. These jackets had a lion, an elephant or a panther on the right sleeve to designate the regiment. Superior officers had no uniformity in their dress. According to General Court (one of the French officers in the Punjab), 'many wore Brandenburg jackets embellished with gold or silver, and an odd cut, poorly imitated from our hussar uniforms'.The painter Imam Bakhsh (active circa 1825–45) was employed by the Sikh nobility but produced commissions for Claude Auguste Court and Jean Baptiste Ventura, French and Italian generals in Ranjit Singh's army. In 1838, General Ventura had French artist Alfred de Dreux paint a large oil painting based on a similar equestrian portrait of the Maharajah by Imam Bakhsh to present to King Louis-Philippe of France (Musée du Louvre Inv. 4096). In 1841 Imam Bakhsh painted another comparable equestrian portrait of Maharajah Ranjit Singh for General Court (Musee Guimet BG 399756).The present composition is closely connected with an illustrated folio (f. 284a) in a manuscript in the Royal Ontario Museum (and sold in these rooms, Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 28th April 2005, lot 115) of the Ain-i-Akbari (Chronicles of Emperor Akbar), Lahore, 1822, which shows Ranjit Singh riding, a parasol above him, surrounded by attendants. The Maharajah sits in an almost identical riding posture, holding a kerchief, and the three men behind the Maharajah and his mount are portrayed in the same poses (other figures are different).For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Maharajah Narinder Singh of Patiala (reg. 1845-62) on horseback Punjab, Patiala, circa 1850-55gouache and gold on paper, laid down on an album page with gilt-decorated floral borders, illuminated (empty) text cartouche in upper border 430 x 354 mm.Footnotes:Maharajah Narinder Singh, the fifth in his ruling line, was once described as 'the most enlightened ruler Patiala has ever possessed'. During his reign he encouraged music and poetry, commissioned illustrated manuscripts of both Sikh and Hindu texts, built palaces, gardens and forts. He not only inherited the relative quiet of the reign of his predecessor, Maharajah Karam Singh, but flourished as a result of his support of the British in the Anglo-Sikh Wars, and later in the Mutiny or Uprising of 1857, when he rejected overtures from the Mughal Emperor and provided men and weapons to assist the British. The British in gratitude conferred estates and honours on him.For a survey of the artistic flourishing at Patiala, see B. N. Goswamy, 'Continuing Traditions in the later Sikh Kingdoms', in S. Stronge (ed.), The Arts of the Sikh Kingdoms, London 1999, pp. 165-179; for a painting of Narinder Singh on an elephant in procession, in the Sheesh Mahal Museum and Medal Gallery, Chandigarh, see Stronge, op. cit., pp. 176-177, pl. 200; and for an 1860 photograph of Narinder Singh, together with a discussion of his career, see D. Singh Toor, In Pursuit of Empire: Treasures from the Toor Collection of Sikh Art, London 2018, pp. 258-259.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A jade and gold-koftgari steel inlaid chess board North India, 19th Centuryof square form on four ball feet, the spinach jade and brown hardstone board set within a steel frame decorated in gold overlay with an undulating floral vine, the squares inlaid with mother of pearl flowerheads, purple velvet backing; the pieces carved in green and brown hardstone with silver finials the board 45.3 x 45.3 cm.(33)Footnotes:The history of chess can largely be divided into three periods, originating in India with the ancient Hindu game of Chaturanga, followed by the medieval Shatranj and concluding with the modern game as we now know it, which first emerged at the beginning of the 16th Century. From the start of the 19th Century, there was a large demand for decorative chess sets, commissioned by Western traders from Indian exporters. Inlaid flowers, stars, arabesques and figures often feature on Indian chessboards, as demonstrated by the floral motifs in this example. For further discussion see V. Keats, Chessmen for Collectors, London, 1985. An example of a 19th Century Indian jade chess table can be found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (48.174.70).For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A group of glass replicas of historic diamonds including the Koh-i-noor in its former and current state Europe, first half of the 20th Centurycomprising fourteen glass diamonds, one blue, in fitted case, each with printed label, the box with retailers label to front for 'Jos. H. Lehmann, Jeweler, Portland, Ore.' the case 28 x 18.3 x 4.3 cm. Footnotes:The replicas include the Grand-Mogul, Orloff, Regent, Grand Duke of Tuscany, Star of the South, Koh-i-noor (old cut), Koh-i-noor (new cut), Shah, Piggot, Nassack, Sancy, Pasha of Egypt, Blue and the Polar Star.Replica gem sets of this kind were created for diamond promotion purposes and for gemmological education. The present set contains a replica of the famous Koh-i-noor (Mountain of Light) diamond. The stone is known to have been in the possession of Mughal emperors, including Shah Jahan, where it was set into his Peacock Throne. The name was given to the stone by the Persian ruler Nadir Shah after he captured Delhi in 1739 and it soon came to symbolise supreme power in the region. The Koh-i-noor later became the possession of Queen Victoria following the Treaty of Lahore, after which time it was re-cut by Prince Albert, resulting in the loss of 40% of the stone's weight. Both the original and the re-cut versions of the diamond are replicated in this set. For further discussion on the stone, see D. Toor, In Pursuit of Empire: Treasures from the Toor Collection of Sikh Art, London, 2018.For a similar replica gem set sold in these rooms, see Bonhams Islamic and Indian Art, 25 October 2021, lot 336.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Fritz Munich (German, 20th Century) Maharajah Yadavindra Singh of Patiala (reg. 1938-47)oil on canvas, signed and dated 1936 lower left 255 x 133.5 cm.Footnotes:Fritz Munich was a German artist who visited and worked in princely states in Rajasthan and the Punjab between 1932 and 1937. His works still hang in the palaces of various rulers, including Udaipur and Kapurthala. When the Second World War began he returned to Germany where he was forced under duress to paint portraits of Nazi officers.The painting of Maharajah Yadavindra Singh was completed in 1936, a fine full-length oil on canvas, depicting the 6 foot 7 inch tall prince. Munich worked at Patiala for some time, and photographs are in existence showing him working, palette and brush in hand, with the painting standing behind him. Another photograph shows the Maharajah himself standing (in full dress) next to the portrait.Fritz Munich followed in the footsteps of another German artist, Archibald Herman Muller (1878-1952). Muller trained at the Madras School of Art, but by 1910 had moved to Bombay, and in 1911 won the Bombay Art Society Award. In 1922 he took up employment (largely out of poverty) with the Maharajah of Bikaner, ostensibly to record the ruler's hunting expeditions, specialising in paintings of tigers, work which did not agree with Muller.Maharajah Yadavindra Singh (1914-74) was successor to Maharajah Bhupinder Singh. He served in the Patiala State Police (becoming its Inspector-General), and served abroad during World War Two. He played in one Test Match against England in 1934. He was India's ambassador to Italy and then the Netherlands in the 1960s and 1970s. For a photograph of him, dated circa 1938, in the John Fasal Collection, see A. Jackson, A. Jaffer (edd.), Maharaja: the Splendour of India's Royal Courts, London 2009, p. 226-227, no. 196.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
The Golden Temple and Akhal Takht, Amritsar Gyula Tornai (Hungarian, 1861-1928)oil on canvas, signed lower left 136 x 100 cm.Footnotes:One of the foremost Hungarian Orientalist painters, Gyula Tornai began his artistic education in the academies of Vienna, Munich and Budapest, where he studied under prominent artists such as Hans Makart and Gyula Benczúr. Tornai's style was heavily influenced by Makart's aestheticism and tonality known as Makartstil. Tornai began his career painting numerous genre scenes. However, after his travels to more exotic locales, his choice of subjects changed dramatically. His early visit to Tangier, Morocco, in 1890–91, provided him with new motifs to explore. In 1900 he exhibited to great acclaim many of the works he completed abroad at the Exposition Universelle in Paris. In 1904, Tornai offered a significant number of works from these journeys for sale in Budapest in order to finance an artistic adventure to India and Japan. The sale of the paintings was a great success and in the summer of 1905 the artist set off for the Far East.Upon his return from this two-year journey, the artist gathered together sixty large canvases and several studies and sent them on exhibition through several major European cities, including London, Paris, Hamburg, Dresden, Leipzig and finally Budapest in the autumn of 1909. Tornai often designed the frames for his paintings to complement the subject matter. His paintings are now in the Hungarian National Gallery.This work was possibly exhibited among the approximately 70 artworks in the atist's solo exhibition Japan and India at the Goupil Gallery, London in 1907, and at the Hungarian National Fine Art Society's Art Gallery, Budapest, in 1909.There are three known paintings of Amritsar by Tornai, two of which depict the Golden Temple. For another, similar view by Tornai, though smaller than our painting, and more tightly focused on the Temple and not including the buildings behind it, see Christie's, Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds, 6th October 2009, lot 286.In this view the artist has taken a vantage point looking at the Har Ki Pauri facade of the temple with a view of the Akal Takht in the background.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
The Taj Mahal by moonlight, with the mosque beyond Hugo Vilfred Pedersen (Danish, 1870-1959)oil on canvas, signed Hugo v. P lower right 89 x 125 cm.Footnotes:For another example of the same subject, to which Pedersen frequently returned, see Christie's, Travel, Science and Natural History, 25th April 2012, lot 240; Visions of India, 5th June 1996, lots 152 and 153. The same moonlit view is used as a poignant backdrop in a work sold in these rooms (Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 25th October 2021, lot 265), depicting the aged Emperor Shah Jahan imprisoned overlooking it. Pedersen studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, and afterwards spent twelve years travelling in the Far East and India. He was probably present at the Delhi Durbar in 1903, painting a portrait of the Viceroy, Lord Curzon.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Charles R. Gerrard ARA (British, b. 1892) The Delhi Gate, Delhioil on board, signed C. Gerrard lower right 51 x 61 cm.Footnotes:The Delhi Gate depicted by Gerrard in this painting was built in the 17th Century, comprising one of fourteen such gates built by Shah Jahan within his city walls, having moved his capital from Agra (the city's original name was Shahjahanabad, after its founder). The Delhi Gate stands at the entrance of Daryagani, linking New Delhi city with the old walled city.C. R. Gerrard was Principal of the Sir J. J. School of Art in Bombay from 1936 to 1946, introducing a keen personal observation of 1930s modernist developments in British and European painting, sculpture, graphic design and architecture. He was assisted in this by exiles from the Nazi regime such as Walter Langhammer and Rudi van Leyden, who with Gerrard directed at the School, invigorated the Bombay Art Society and encouraged modernist and art deco European design amongst local architectural practices and in commercial printing. Despite the pupils' necessarily local origins and inability to travel during the war, Gerrard encouraged groupings of pupils to adopt this eye on Western developments.In 1941 a group referred to as the 'Young Turks' held a show featuring the work of P. T. Reddy, M. Y. Kulkarni, A. A. Majeed, C. Baptista and M. Bhople, artists who regarded themselves as being in modernist opposition to the more Victorian and Edwardian style of Dhurandhar, Haldankar, and Trindade. But more notably in the history of modern Indian art the less tentative group known as the Bombay Progressives emerged. This consisted of Francis Newton Souza (whom, however, Gerrard was forced to expel from the School for his connections with the pro-independence movement), H. A. Gade, S. H. Raza, S. K. Bakre, K. H. Ara and M. F. Husain. Some of Gerrard's pupils retained close ties with Bombay (e.g. K. K. Hebbar and Tyeb Mehta) while others, like Souza and Raza, under his influence embarked for Britain and Europe after the war.Gerrard brought the J. J. to maturity: under enlightened predecessors such as Lockwood Kipling, Solomon Gladstone, Cecil Burns and M. V. Dhurandhar a beaux-arts and arts and crafts traditionality had understandably persisted, but with Gerrard the J. J. became modernist.For discussion of Gerrard and his work, his influence on Bakre and others, and the Bombay art scene at this time, see Y. Dalmia, The Making of Modern Indian Art: the Progressives, New Delhi 2001, pp. 27-28, 189, 240-241; and N. Tuli, The Flamed Mosaic: Indian Contemporary Painting, 1997, pp. 196, 200.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Rudolf von Leyden (German, 1908-83) View of Portofinooil on canvas, signed lower left, label of Chemould Gallery, Bombay, on stretcher 51 x 70 cm.Footnotes:Why does a view of the Italian resort of Portofino, painted by an emigré German artist - feature in a sale devoted to India in Art?Rudolf (Rudy) von Leyden, was art critic of the Times of India, and a political cartoonist and satirist. He 'discovered' and encouraged many of the young artists who became the major figures of modern Indian art post-1947. Syed Haider Raza, for instance, travelled to France in 1950 on a scholarship from the Alliance Francaise, with support from von Leyden and Walter Langhammer, and Paris and France, and its landscape, became fundamental to Raza's work of the 50s and 60s. Von Leyden produced a book about him in 1959.Kekoo Gandhy, of the Jehangir Art Gallery, wrote: 'Remember that in those days, Indian artists had no means of going abroad or of following trends in Europe. Of course, there were magazines, but the unexpected arrival of all these Europeans - most of them Jews fleeing from Austria - really started the Progressive movement off'. ('The Beginnings of the Art Movement', Seminar, no. 528, quoted in D. Singh, 'German-speaking exiles and the writing of Indian art history', arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com, p. 16).Rudy von Leyden was born in 1908 in Berlin to a middle-class family, the younger of two sons. He was a man of Jewish descent and of left-wing political views, so the rise of the Nazi party was naturally the main motivation for him to leave Germany. But while, like other such political refugees, he might have gone to France, Britain or the USA, he seems to have chosen India instead, most probably because his elder brother, Albrecht, had been living and working in Bombay since 1927. Rudolf had just finished his studies (he received his PhD in Geology from the University of Göttingen in 1932) and was looking to embark on his own career. He arrived in Bombay in 1933.Geology was rapidly left behind, and he began working in the publicity department of a textiles firm, but also soon showed his interest in visual art. He set up the Leyden Commercial Art Studio, painted watercolours while travelling around the country, and also began series of political cartoons, which he continued to produce throughout the war, publishing under the pseudonym 'Denley', an English-sounding anagram of 'Leyden', and in which he maintained a resolutely anti-Nazi tone.He was a central figure in the art scene in Bombay and elsewhere, collecting Indian art from various periods, organising exhibitions, and actively promoting young, contemporary artists. He wrote articles, for instance, about the work of the Calcutta Group (whose members included, inter alia, Paritosh Sen and Gopal Ghose), founded in 1943He was a contributing editor of the leading art review MARG from 1946 and served as an adviser for the acquisitions and art commissions of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), which owned one of the most important collections of post-independence Indian art. He collected, and also became an authority on, antique board games and Indian playing cards (ganjifa). Many German or Austrian nationals were arrested as enemy aliens after the outbreak of war in 1939. Von Leyden had managed to acquire a British passport by that time, and used his contacts to help other German-speaking emigres to navigate the British authorities. One fellow artist and cartoonist, Walter Langhammer, and his wife Käthe were rescued from exile and arrest when von Leyden sent Langhammer's cartoons to several influential people in Bombay, to prove his political disposition and loyalty to the British government. Langhammer later became Art Director of the Times of India.For further information on von Leyden and his context, see N. Tuli, The Flamed Mosaic: Indian Contemporary Painting, 1997, pp. 198-201; S. S. Bean (ed.), Midnight to the Boom: Painting in India after Independence, London 2013, pp. 37-42; and M. Arbuthnot, 'Bombay satire: Rudolf von Leyden's political cartoons in India in the 1930s and 40s', British Library blogpost, 12th December 2018.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A collection of English ceramics, comprising, a Staffordshire slip vase, and a model house, an early 19th century blue and white transferware footed bowl, a art deco style cup and saucer, a pearlware footed small bowl and another bowl heightened gilt work with floral design on a white ground, all AF (7)
Three early 20th century fans, comprising an art deco example, with gold decoration and hand painted leaf of a reclining lady in the sea, 40cm wide when opened, together with a pierced bone stick example with a lithographic leaf with heightened gilt work, 51cm wide when opened, and a bone stick and decorated lace example, 38.5cm wide when opened, all with wear AF (3)
A collection of metalware's, comprising a copper and brass handled heated tray 15cm x 42.5cm, two pairs of brass candlesticks, the tallest 27cm high, two novelty brass canons, a set of postage scales on a shaped wooden base 17cm wide, an item of trench art, a brass table lighter, a brass match case and two cased sets of scales, AF (qty)

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