Daulat (painter)
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Muhammad Daulat (or Dawlat) was a leading artist in
Mughal painting Mughal painting is a style of painting on paper confined to miniatures either as book illustrations or as single works to be kept in albums ( muraqqa), from the territory of the Mughal Empire in South Asia. It emerged from Persian miniature pai ...
, active on imperial commissions between about 1595 and 1635–1640, during the reigns of Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan. He began his career painting large narrative scenes, then specialized in portraits, but later in his career seems to have specialized in highly ornate borders to miniatures.


Life and career

His father, L'al, served in the imperial court, very likely as one of the many artists in the imperial workshop. Daulat trained there and was active as a painter by the mid-1590s, remaining for the whole of his career. His brother Daud (Da'ud) was also an artist, who is usually referred to in inscriptions and art history as "Daud, brother of Daulat". Like
Govardhan Govardhan also called Giriraj, is a key pilgrimage centre in India and a municipal town; a nagar panchayat; seat of a MLA Member of Legislative Assembly of Uttar Pradesh; a Tehsil, in Mathura district in the India in state of Uttar Pradesh. Ab ...
, the other main portrait specialist of the period, and ultimately a finer artist than Daulat, he was influenced by Basawan. Important manuscript projects he contributed to in the 1590s include the
British Library The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom and is one of the largest libraries in the world. It is estimated to contain between 170 and 200 million items from many countries. As a legal deposit library, the British ...
''
Akbarnama The ''Akbarnama'', which translates to ''Book of Akbar'', the official chronicle of the reign of Akbar, the third Mughal Emperor (), commissioned by Akbar himself and written by his court historian and biographer, Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak. It was w ...
'' (MS Or. 12988, 3 miniatures), Akbar's dispersed ''
Razmnama The ''Razmnāma'' (Book of War) (رزم نامہ) is a Persian translation of the Sanskrit epic Mahabharata, commissioned by the Mughal Emperor Akbar. In 1574, Akbar started a Maktab Khana or "House of Translation" in his new capital at Fatehpur ...
'', and the '' Baburnama'' in New Delhi (4 miniatures). In the next century, he contributed to the Windsor Padshahnama and the Kevorkian Album. Daulat shows an "unusual self-consciousness" even in his early works. There are two identifiable self-portraits, both made at the emperor's request, as well as portraits of other artist colleagues, and some of his most significant miniatures contain tiny signatures hidden among the detail of the painting, for example on the girdle of a soldier in one '' Baburnama'' miniature. One signature reads "Muhammad Daulat, son of L'al", and in another he describes himself as "the least of the houseborn", indicating his father worked in the court. There are other "formulaic expressions of humility" of the type expected in the Mughal court, though Daulat takes these further than most; his inscription on the Gulshan Album page with his self-portrait ends "Written by the lowly, needy, insignificant, Daulat". Sometimes he puns on his name, which means "empire".


Style

Daulat's style has been described as "distinguished by clusters of narrow-shouldered, voluminous figures and a bright palette intensified by pronounced contour shading. His facial types are quite individualized, but share dark features, full cheeks and large, staring eyes, the latter frequently directed at the viewer." His double portrait in the Khamsa of Nizami (British Library, Or. 12208) was added to the book many years later, at the specific request of Jahangir, a signal honour. The text is dated AH 1004 (1595–1596 AD) and the main narrative miniatures come from the same period, while the added colophon miniature probably dates to 1609–1610. Daulat does not seem to have contributed to the original miniatures, although some are now missing. The portrait of the calligrapher is probably posthumous, although Daulat would have known him when alive. This page followed some other Mughal manuscripts in giving a pictorial colophon which showed a pair of men in the imperial book workshop working at their specialisms, calligraphy, drawing or painting, and in one case preparing a sheet of paper by polishing it (the usual Mughal practice for luxury manuscript pages). A page by Daulat in the Gulshan Album, a lavish ''
muraqqa A Muraqqa ( tr, Murakka, ar, مورّقة, fa, مُرَقّع) is an album in book form containing Islamic miniature paintings and specimens of Islamic calligraphy, normally from several different sources, and perhaps other matter. The album ...
'' made for Jahangir and now in the
Golestan Palace The Golestan Palace ( fa, کاخ گلستان, ''Kākh-e Golestān''), also transliterated as the Gulistan Palace and sometimes translated as the Rose Garden Palace from Persian language, was built in the 16th century, renovated in the 18th cen ...
Library,
Tehran Tehran (; fa, تهران ) is the largest city in Tehran Province and the capital of Iran. With a population of around 9 million in the city and around 16 million in the larger metropolitan area of Greater Tehran, Tehran is the most popul ...
, has wide gold borders which include seven portraits of court employees, five shown drawing, painting or reading. One is Daulat's self-portrait. Daulat's inscription records that this was also done at the emperor's specific request.Rice, 149, illustrated on 150 File:DAUD ( DAULAT brother ) Rama's servent heard gossip about sita.jpg, A page inscribed "Daud, brother of Daulat", in the Razmnamah (British Library, Or. 12076), c. 1599 File:1 Daulat. Portrait of Abu'l Hasan. From the Gulshan Album, ca. 1610, Golestan Palace Library, Tehran.jpg, Portrait of Abu'l Hasan, from the Gulshan Album, c. 1610,
Golestan Palace The Golestan Palace ( fa, کاخ گلستان, ''Kākh-e Golestān''), also transliterated as the Gulistan Palace and sometimes translated as the Rose Garden Palace from Persian language, was built in the 16th century, renovated in the 18th cen ...
Library,
Tehran Tehran (; fa, تهران ) is the largest city in Tehran Province and the capital of Iran. With a population of around 9 million in the city and around 16 million in the larger metropolitan area of Greater Tehran, Tehran is the most popul ...
File:Daulat. Portrait of Bishandas. ca. 1610, Detail of the border illumination of the list from Golestan Palace Library, Tehran..jpg, Portrait of Bishandas, c. 1610, from the same page File:Portrait of Maharaja Bhim Kanwar.jpg, alt=Border by Daulat to a portrait by Nanha of Maharaja Bhim Kanwar, son of Amar Singh I of Mewar, from the Kevorkian Album, a muraqqa (album), c. 1615–29. Border signed "the work of the slave of the threshold Daulat", Border by Daulat to a portrait by Nanha of Maharaja Bhim Kanwar, son of
Amar Singh I Maharana Amar Singh I, the Maharana of Mewar (March 16, 1559 – January 26, 1620), was the eldest son and successor of Maharana Pratap of Mewar. He was the 16th Rana of Mewar dynasty of Sisodia Rajputs and ruler of Mewar from January 19, 1597 ...
of Mewar, from the Kevorkian Album, a
muraqqa A Muraqqa ( tr, Murakka, ar, مورّقة, fa, مُرَقّع) is an album in book form containing Islamic miniature paintings and specimens of Islamic calligraphy, normally from several different sources, and perhaps other matter. The album ...
(album), c. 1615–1629. Border signed "the work of the slave of the threshold Daulat"


Notes


References

*"EB"
"Daulat" in ''Encyclopaedia Britannica''
*"Grove"
"Daulat" in ''Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture''
p. 518 *Rice, Yael
"Between the Brush and Pen; on the Intertwined Histories of Mughal Painting and Calligraphy"
in ''Envisioning Islamic Art and Architecture: Essays in Honor of Renata Holod'', edited by David J. Roxburgh * Welch, Stuart Cary, ''The Emperor's Album: Images of Mughal India'', 1987, Metropolitan Museum of Art, , 9780870994999
fully online
{{Authority control Mughal painters 17th-century Indian painters 17th-century deaths 16th-century births