Category:Payag
Indian painter | |||||
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Date of birth | 1595 India | ||||
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Date of death | 1655 | ||||
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"Payag: Hindu artist active at the Mughal courts in Delhi, Lahore, Allahabad, and Agra, 1595–ca. 1650; brother of Balchand
Payag entered the atelier of Akbar alongside his brother Balchand, but he was slower to mature as a painter, and it appears that he did not gain recognition and senior rank as a court painter at that time. In the 1590s, he was assigned minor roles. Then he is no longer visible as an identifiable hand until the reign of Shah Jahan (r. 1628–58), when he emerged, this time as a major figure. All Payag’s great works are associated with that reign. The commission from Shah Jahan of an equestrian portrait is a measure of his new standing at court; his astute powers of observation and facility in painting the minutiae of jewelry and weaponry enhance the grandeur of this imperial image. It is one of the great imperial portraits of Shah Jahan’s reign, commissioned soon after his accession. Payag introduced a shallow depth of field occupied by a stallion and its imperial rider, and he sprinkled it with beautifully observed wildflowers. Shah Jahan’s white jama, gold sash (patka), and jewel-encrusted weapons are rendered impeccably. As a trusted royal portrait artist, Payag had privileged access to the inner court, where he could study closely the luxury goods he portrayed with such dazzling verisimilitude. The culture through which this highly idealized portraiture was filtered employed heightened aesthetic refinement as an expression of the imperial self.
But Payag also had other dimensions to his work, which allowed him to create poetic, almost dreamlike atmospheric landscapes. He was perhaps unique in the Mughal ateliers in exploring the pictorial possibilities of a single light source, a notion learned from European chiaroscuro techniques of scientifically determined light and shade. In Prince Dara Shikoh hunting nilgais, set in the low light of an early evening hunt, a light source at upper right transforms the composition into a study in light and shadow. This technique was put to dramatic effect in one of the greatest theatrical pictures in the Padshahnama, Seige of the Fort of Qandahar, in which the confusion of battle is heightened by the use of billowing clouds of smoke pierced through by the intense glow of a setting sun. Little is known of Payag’s work from the last decade of his career, though he is associated with the Late Shah Jahan Album." in Metropolitan Museum of Art
Media in category "Payag"
The following 33 files are in this category, out of 33 total.
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"Shah Jahan on Horseback", Folio from the Shah Jahan Album MET 159433.jpg 2,652 × 4,000; 3.55 MB
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"Shah Jahan on Horseback", Folio from the Shah Jahan Album MET COVERr5 98M.jpg 1,914 × 2,000; 4.67 MB
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"Shah Jahan on Horseback", Folio from the Shah Jahan Album MET DP234074.jpg 1,266 × 1,875; 1.8 MB
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"Shah Jahan on Horseback", Folio from the Shah Jahan Album MET DP235886.jpg 2,515 × 3,746; 3.25 MB
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"Shah Jahan on Horseback", Folio from the Shah Jahan Album MET DT1030.jpg 2,498 × 3,722; 2.02 MB
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Dara Shikoh Hunting Nilgae.jpg 698 × 500; 184 KB
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Humayun (Mughal art, circa 1650).jpg 900 × 1,592; 781 KB
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"Shah Jahan on Horseback", Folio from the Shah Jahan Album MET CAT 40DETr1 89C.jpg 1,715 × 2,000; 4.34 MB
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"Shah Jahan on Horseback", Folio from the Shah Jahan Album MET CAT 40r6 89C.jpg 1,350 × 2,000; 3.17 MB
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Mughal Siege of Qandahar, May 1631, the Padshahnama (RCT).jpg 1,479 × 2,000; 2.44 MB
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Payag - The Battle of Samugarh - 1999.298 - Arthur M. Sackler Museum.jpg 1,024 × 751; 300 KB
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Payag, Shah Jahan on Horseback, Folio from the Shah Jahan Album ca. 1630, Metmuseum.jpg 2,532 × 3,749; 2.87 MB
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Payāg Battle in the mountains.jpg 600 × 852; 168 KB
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Payāg Princess on elephant.jpg 700 × 492; 525 KB
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Portrait of Islam Khan Mashhadi MET DT4816.jpg 2,439 × 3,722; 2.32 MB
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Portrait of Islam Khan Mashhadi MET sf55-121-26r.jpg 900 × 1,351; 272 KB
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Portrait of Islam Khan Mashhadi.jpg 900 × 1,351; 255 KB
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Shah Jahan Receives Persian Ambassadors.jpg 1,991 × 2,756; 1.1 MB
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Shah Jahan Riding Stallion.jpg 667 × 902; 231 KB
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The Battle of Samugarh.jpg 1,024 × 751; 195 KB
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The Goddess Bhairavi Devi with Shiva MET DP257990 (cropped).jpg 2,509 × 1,924; 1.52 MB
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The Goddess Bhairavi Devi with Shiva MET DP257990.jpg 3,913 × 2,776; 3.08 MB
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The Goddess Bhairavi Devi with Shiva MET DP257991.jpg 3,903 × 2,798; 2.22 MB
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The Padshahnama, Jahangir presents Prince Khuram with a turban ornament.jpg 1,389 × 2,000; 1.36 MB
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The siege of Qandahar (May 1631).jpg 1,470 × 2,000; 2.5 MB
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Travelers Gathered in the Night (6124499717).jpg 1,034 × 661; 748 KB