Back to Battle & Epic
Wall Art

Two Elephants Fighting in a Courtyard Before Muhammad Shah — Restored Pahari Wall Art

$79.00

Size

Frame Color

  • Free shipping in USA, UK & Australia
  • Museum-grade archival pigment
  • Fulfilled locally for faster delivery
  • Secure checkout
About the piece Scroll ↓

The Mughal emperor responsible for a revival of courtly arts and pastimes was Muhammad Shah (reigned 1719–48). This painting was made by an artist from a small kingdom in the western Himalayas who stayed at the Mughal court in Delhi and painted scenes of his experiences.

Like his predecessors, Muhammad Shah enjoyed watching elephant fights. He is shown in his window of public audience, marked by a golden carpet, smoking a hookah. Women from his harem can be seen looking on from behind painted screens.

Two pairs of men hold fire brands and spears to prevent the elephants from running off and to keep them under control. The intensity of the fight—captured at a moment when one mahout, or elephant trainer, has dropped his goad and is about to jump off—is augmented by the dense colors and forms in contrast to the otherwise pale planes, balanced only by the strip of palace windows.

Northern India, Himachal Pradesh, Guler, c. 1730–40. Attributed to Nainsukh. Original medium: Gum tempera, ink, and gold on paper.

Faithfully restored from museum archives and printed on premium canvas-textured fine art paper, framed and ready to hang.

  • Enhanced matte paper framed poster
  • Sizes: 12×16 in and 18×24 in
  • Frame colors: Black, Red Oak, White
  • Free U.S. shipping
Collection Battle & Epic

Also in Battle & Epic

View collection