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The Passing of Shah Jahan is a Miniature painting, painted by the Indian artist Abanindranath Tagore in 1902. The painting depicts a scene in which the fifth Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan stares upon the Taj Mahal on his deathbed, with his daughter Jahanara Begum at his feet.
The official position taken by the Wikimedia Foundation is that "faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain".This photographic reproduction is therefore also considered to be in the public domain in the United States.
Painting of Shah Jahan hunting Asiatic lions at Burhanpur, present-day Madhya Pradesh, from 1630 Shah Jahan and his sons captured the city of Kandahar in 1638 from the Safavids , prompting the retaliation of the Persians led by their ruler Abbas II of Persia , who recaptured it in 1649.
The Shah Jahan Album, also known as the Kevorkian Album or the Emperor's Album, is a series of Mughal miniatures dating between 1620–1820 from Mughal India. The album was intended for a private audience, likely consisting of the royal family and close friends. [ 1 ]
The Khalili Collection of Islamic Art has one miniature in which Shah Jahan and his court watch two elephants fighting. [5] There were some later illustrated manuscript copies made; for example the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has miniatures from 17th-century versions, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art from one of around 1800.
Bichitr (fl. 17th century) was an Indian painter during the Mughal period, patronized by the emperors Jahangir and Shah Jahan. [1] The earliest known painting of his is a mature work from c. 1615. Most of his paintings are formal portraits, and a large number of portraits in the 1630s are credited to him.
The Emperor Shah Jahan standing on a globe, with a halo and European-style putti, c. 1618–19 to 1629. The Mughal painting style later spread to other Indian courts, both Muslim and Hindu, and later Sikh, and was often used to depict Hindu subjects. This was mostly in northern India.
Passing of Shah Jahan (1900) Poet's Baul-dance in Falgurni (1916) Pushpa-Radha (1912) Radhika gazing at the portrait of Sri Krishna (1913) Shah Jahan Dreaming of Taj (1909) Sri Radha by the River Jamuna (1913) Summer, from Ritu Sanghar of Kalidasa (1905) Tales of Arabian Nights (1928) Temple Dancer (1912) The Call of the Flute (1910) The Feast ...