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Abd al-Samad

'Abd al-Ṣamad or Khwaja 'Abd-us-Ṣamad was a 16th century painter of Persian miniatures who moved to India and became one of the founding masters of the Mughal miniature tradition, and later the holder of a number of senior administrative roles. 'Abd's career under the Mughals, from about 1550 to 1595, is relatively well documented, and a number of paintings are authorised to him from this period. From about 1572 he headed the imperial workshop of the Emperor Akbar and "it was under his guidance that Mughal style came to maturity".[1] It has recently been contended by a leading specialist, Barbara Brend, that Samad is the same person as Mirza Ali, a Persian artist whose documented career seems to end at the same time as Abd al-Samad appears working for the Mughals.[2]

Abd al-Samad
Born
Khwaja 'Abd-us-Samad

Shiraz, Iran
NationalityPersian
Notable workIllustration of the Hamzanama; Khamseh of Nizami
AwardsMaster of the Mint (1576)
Dewan of Multan (1584)
Patron(s)Humayun; Akbar
Barbad Plays for Khusraw, Khamsa of Nizami, British Library, Oriental 2265, 1539–43, inscribed Mirza Ali at bottom left.

Mirza Ali edit

Mirza Ali's name first appears in a famous manuscript of the Khamsa of Nizami, now British Library Oriental 2265, which is dated March 1543.[3] According to Stuart Cary Welch, there are only three other mentions of him in contemporary records. These say that he was the son of another leading artist of the court workshop, Sultan Muhammed, and so grew up in the milieu of the court atelier, and was a distinguished painter. Kamal of Tabriz is recorded as a pupil of his.[4] The inscriptions in BL Or. 2265 are among the main sources for attributing Persian miniatures of the period. Six painters are named, and although the inscriptions are additions rather than signatures, they have been generally accepted as correct. Mirza Ali's name is inscribed on two miniatures, both courtyard scenes, and his father's on one, to which Welch adds two more un-inscribed miniatures.[5]

Welch further attributes several earlier miniatures to Mirza Ali, including six from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp of the 1520s; Brend is sympathetic to at least two of these attributions, but finds two unlikely, in terms of agreement with the style of the later works.[6] After considering some other isolated works, with mixed verdicts on his attributions, she firmly parts company with Welch over his attributions to Mirza Ali of six miniatures in another famous manuscript, the Haft Aurang made for Prince Ibrahim Mirza in 1555–56 (now Freer Gallery of Art), after he should, if he were indeed also Samad, have left for Afghanistan and then India. Welch admits that the style of these paintings is different, but attributes this to a change in the spirit of the times, an explanation Brend finds hard to accept,[7] although the attributions are repeated by other scholars writing after Brend's paper; Sheila S. Blair finds they display "the artist's increasing spirituality and mannerism".[8] After discussing other aspects of the question, and comparing the styles of Mirza Ali and Samad, Brend suggests that they are indeed the same artist, who adopted a sobriquet on moving to a new country.[9] Stylistic similarities include the layout of courtyard compositions and the arrangements of colour, details like a fondness for the virtuosic depiction of grilles and open-work screens, and similar treatment of figures.[10]

Samad edit

 
The earliest known example of a Mughal painting, Princes of the House of, Timur (c. 1550-55), is attributed to Abd al-Samad. It was probably executed for Humayun, and added to under later emperors to update the family tree.
Painted with gouache and gold on fine cotton fabric. British Museum

One source says that Samad's father was the vizier of Shah Shuja of Shiraz, a difficulty with her theory that Brend explains by speculating that this was instead his grandfather, in whose house he was brought up while Sultan Muhammed established his career at court.[11] According to Mughal records, Samad became a master in the court workshop of Shah Tahmasp I of Persia. He was also a calligrapher,[12] something not mentioned in connection with Mirza Ali. No works are generally attributed to him before about 1544–45,[13] although Welch attributes a miniature in the much earlier Shah Tahmasp Shahnameh to him. Brend finds this painting "unsatisfactory" and the work of an inexperienced painter.[14]

Samad first met the exiled Mughal emperor Humayun in Tabriz in 1544.[15] In 1546 Humayun asked Tahmasp to release Samad and his fellow Persian Mir Sayyid Ali from his service so that he could engage them,[16] and in about 1549,[17][18][19] they arrived at Humayun's temporary capital in Kabul, where Samad was engaged by Humayun to teach his son Akbar, and possibly the emperor himself, how to draw.[18][20] With Mir Sayyid Ali and Dust Muhammad, another Persian, Samad "introduced a fully imperial Persian style into the Mughal ateliers", which seem previously to have been small and consisting of artists trained in various centres including Bukhara.[21] Samad probably worked on the unusually large painting of the Princes of the House of Timur (British Museum), which Humayun commissioned about 1550–55, in particular on the landscape background.[22] In 1552 a group of single miniatures including work by the two Persians was included in a diplomatic gift to the ruler of Kashgar, as Humayun worked to assemble support to regain his throne.[20] Some of his works from this period are in a muraqqa or album in the library of the Golestan Palace in Tehran (MSS 1663–4), still showing a thoroughly Safavid style.[18][23] One of these miniatures depicts Akbar giving a miniature painting to his father Humayun, and includes Samad's name on a portfolio; the figure next to it is probably his portrait. The image both uses a fully Persian style, and includes thematic elements, including the self-portrait, that are "dazzling new departures in Islamic painting"[24]

Samad and Mir Sayyid Ali followed the emperor on his return to India, only seven months before he died in 1556. They were retained by the fourteen-year-old Akbar who within a few years set about greatly expanding his court workshop.[25] A drawing with muted colour, inscribed with Samad's name, in the Bodleian Library in Oxford depicts the arrest, three days after Akbar's accession, of Humayun's troublesome favourite, Abdu'l Ma'ali, who is seized from behind by a burly courtier.[26] Both artists probably worked on the Tutinama, the first major commission completed in the new reign, where the disparate styles of the several artists used remain clear. But Mir Sayyid Ali was initially given the supervision of Akbar's huge commission of the 1400 large illustrations for the Akbar Hamzanama, which was to be fourteen years in the making.[18][27]

 
Abd al-Samad, miniature of 1588
 
Arghan Div Brings the Chest of Armour to Hamza, from Volume 7 of the Hamzanama, supervised by Samad.

In about 1572 Samad replaced Mir Sayyid Ali (who returned to Persia) as head of the imperial workshop,[28] probably because under Sayyid the progress of the illustrations for the Hamzanama was too slow. At this point the commission was seven years old and only four of the volumes were complete. Under Samad's direction the remaining ten volumes were completed in another seven years. It is uncertain whether Samad painted any of them himself,[29] but "the direction of Mughal painting increasingly came to follow the aims pursued by ‛Abd al-Samad. It is likely that the increased central control that became evident by the Lahore period [1580s on] can be attributed to this artist".[1] Among the mostly Hindu artists trained by Samad were Daswanth and Basavan, who went on to become famous Mughal painters.[18]

Despite his role in forging the new Mughal synthesis of Persian and Indian styles, Samad's own works remain conservative, with a great interest in detail, and rather less in the new style of dramatic narrative and realism favoured by the young Akbar. But by the 1590s elements of his style, including a taste for detail, were in favour, though after his death Mughal painting turned in the direction of simpler compositions emphasising human interactions. He did not have the gift for realistic portraiture which Mughal painting introduced to the Islamic miniature, and unlike many Mughal artists, shows few borrowings from the European prints and other art available in Akbar's court.[30]

In 1576, Akbar put Samad in charge of the Fatehpur Sikri mint, in 1582 he was made "overseer of commerce" and the next year put in charge of the royal household.[15] In 1584, Akbar made him dewan (official in charge of finances) of Multan. He was given a mansab of 400 and honoured with the title of Shirin Qalam (sweet pen).[31] The moves may have been in recognition of his talent for administration, but it has been suggested that "Akbar preferred a more robust approach than that of his romanticised Persian style of painting".[32] But he continued to paint and his last known work is a miniature, of Khusraw hunting, in the illustrations of the 1595 manuscript of the Khamsa of Nizami.[18][33] Works with his name inscribed include a drawing of Akbar with a Dervish (Aga Khan Museum, c. 1586–87).[34] Another late work is a version of a famous Persian composition of two camels fighting by Behzād, which an inscription says was done at the request of his son Sharif when he was infirm.[35] He "must have died in the last years of the century".[36]

He had two painter sons, Muhammad Sharif,[37] and one called Bizhad, for the famous Persian artist Behzād (c. 1450 – c. 1535).[38] Muhammad Sharif was a friend of the next emperor Jahangir, and like his father was given important administrative roles, a pattern unique among the many Mughal painter families.[15] Not all scholars are convinced these sons were not just one, as while Muhammad Sharif is relatively well documented, Bizhad is apparently only known from inscriptions on miniatures.[39]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Grove
  2. ^ Brend, 213
  3. ^ Brend, 213–214
  4. ^ Brend, 214
  5. ^ Brend, 214–215; Welch, attributions to Sultan Muhammed: Plates 21 (old woman complaining, his attribution), 25 ("Shirin Bathing", inscribed), and 32/33 (Mi'raj, his attribution). See also Titley, 84–85
  6. ^ Brend, 216
  7. ^ Brend, 218
  8. ^ Blair, Sheila S. in Mirza ‛Ali, in Oxford Art Online.
  9. ^ Brend, 232 and preceding pages
  10. ^ Brend, 225–230
  11. ^ Brend, 230–232
  12. ^ Titley, 192
  13. ^ Brend, 214; Beach, Blair & Bloom say "No inscribed works by ‛Abd al-Samad are known from the period when he worked in Safavid Iran, though attributions have been proposed"
  14. ^ Brend, 222; this is the painting: The assassination of Chosroës Parvez
  15. ^ a b c Beach, Blair and Bloom
  16. ^ Canby, Sheila. The Golden Age of Persian Art, 1501–1722
  17. ^ Titley, 103, says 1549; or "around 1549–50" according to Crill and Jariwala, 50; Beach, Blair and Bloom say 1550.
  18. ^ a b c d e f "'Abd-us-Samad, Khwaja". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. I: A-Ak – Bayes (15th ed.). Chicago, Illinois: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 2010. pp. 18. ISBN 978-1-59339-837-8.
  19. ^ Other sources say as early as 1548.
  20. ^ a b Beach, 49
  21. ^ Cambridge, 15–21 (quote p. 21); see also Beach, Chapter I
  22. ^ Crill and Jariwala, 50
  23. ^ Beach, Blair & Bloom
  24. ^ Brend, 225–226
  25. ^ Titley, 188
  26. ^ Crill and Jariwala, 52–53
  27. ^ Beach, 60–61
  28. ^ Titley, 191
  29. ^ Beach, 61
  30. ^ Beach, Blair and Bloom; see also Soucek, 170–172
  31. ^ Blochmann, H. (tr.) (1927, reprint 1993). The Ain-I Akbari by Abu 'l-Fazl Allami, Vol. I, Calcutta: The Asiatic Society, pp.554–5
  32. ^ Titley, 192–193
  33. ^ Titley, 193
  34. ^ Akbar with a Dervish 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Aga Khan Museum, c. 1586–87
  35. ^ Soucek, 172
  36. ^ Grove, though Soucek, 166 gives his dates as "ca. 1518-ca. 1600".
  37. ^ Crill and Jariwala, 68
  38. ^ Titley, 192, Soucek, 170
  39. ^ Beach, 144, note 8 thinks it possible they are the same, while Soucek, 170–172 is confident they were different.

References edit

samad, other, uses, abdul, samad, disambiguation, Ṣamad, khwaja, Ṣamad, 16th, century, painter, persian, miniatures, moved, india, became, founding, masters, mughal, miniature, tradition, later, holder, number, senior, administrative, roles, career, under, mug. For other uses see Abdul Samad disambiguation Abd al Ṣamad or Khwaja Abd us Ṣamad was a 16th century painter of Persian miniatures who moved to India and became one of the founding masters of the Mughal miniature tradition and later the holder of a number of senior administrative roles Abd s career under the Mughals from about 1550 to 1595 is relatively well documented and a number of paintings are authorised to him from this period From about 1572 he headed the imperial workshop of the Emperor Akbar and it was under his guidance that Mughal style came to maturity 1 It has recently been contended by a leading specialist Barbara Brend that Samad is the same person as Mirza Ali a Persian artist whose documented career seems to end at the same time as Abd al Samad appears working for the Mughals 2 Abd al SamadBornKhwaja Abd us SamadShiraz IranNationalityPersianNotable workIllustration of the Hamzanama Khamseh of NizamiAwardsMaster of the Mint 1576 Dewan of Multan 1584 Patron s Humayun AkbarBarbad Plays for Khusraw Khamsa of Nizami British Library Oriental 2265 1539 43 inscribed Mirza Ali at bottom left Contents 1 Mirza Ali 2 Samad 3 Notes 4 ReferencesMirza Ali editMirza Ali s name first appears in a famous manuscript of the Khamsa of Nizami now British Library Oriental 2265 which is dated March 1543 3 According to Stuart Cary Welch there are only three other mentions of him in contemporary records These say that he was the son of another leading artist of the court workshop Sultan Muhammed and so grew up in the milieu of the court atelier and was a distinguished painter Kamal of Tabriz is recorded as a pupil of his 4 The inscriptions in BL Or 2265 are among the main sources for attributing Persian miniatures of the period Six painters are named and although the inscriptions are additions rather than signatures they have been generally accepted as correct Mirza Ali s name is inscribed on two miniatures both courtyard scenes and his father s on one to which Welch adds two more un inscribed miniatures 5 Welch further attributes several earlier miniatures to Mirza Ali including six from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp of the 1520s Brend is sympathetic to at least two of these attributions but finds two unlikely in terms of agreement with the style of the later works 6 After considering some other isolated works with mixed verdicts on his attributions she firmly parts company with Welch over his attributions to Mirza Ali of six miniatures in another famous manuscript the Haft Aurang made for Prince Ibrahim Mirza in 1555 56 now Freer Gallery of Art after he should if he were indeed also Samad have left for Afghanistan and then India Welch admits that the style of these paintings is different but attributes this to a change in the spirit of the times an explanation Brend finds hard to accept 7 although the attributions are repeated by other scholars writing after Brend s paper Sheila S Blair finds they display the artist s increasing spirituality and mannerism 8 After discussing other aspects of the question and comparing the styles of Mirza Ali and Samad Brend suggests that they are indeed the same artist who adopted a sobriquet on moving to a new country 9 Stylistic similarities include the layout of courtyard compositions and the arrangements of colour details like a fondness for the virtuosic depiction of grilles and open work screens and similar treatment of figures 10 Samad edit nbsp The earliest known example of a Mughal painting Princes of the House of Timur c 1550 55 is attributed to Abd al Samad It was probably executed for Humayun and added to under later emperors to update the family tree Painted with gouache and gold on fine cotton fabric British Museum One source says that Samad s father was the vizier of Shah Shuja of Shiraz a difficulty with her theory that Brend explains by speculating that this was instead his grandfather in whose house he was brought up while Sultan Muhammed established his career at court 11 According to Mughal records Samad became a master in the court workshop of Shah Tahmasp I of Persia He was also a calligrapher 12 something not mentioned in connection with Mirza Ali No works are generally attributed to him before about 1544 45 13 although Welch attributes a miniature in the much earlier Shah Tahmasp Shahnameh to him Brend finds this painting unsatisfactory and the work of an inexperienced painter 14 Samad first met the exiled Mughal emperor Humayun in Tabriz in 1544 15 In 1546 Humayun asked Tahmasp to release Samad and his fellow Persian Mir Sayyid Ali from his service so that he could engage them 16 and in about 1549 17 18 19 they arrived at Humayun s temporary capital in Kabul where Samad was engaged by Humayun to teach his son Akbar and possibly the emperor himself how to draw 18 20 With Mir Sayyid Ali and Dust Muhammad another Persian Samad introduced a fully imperial Persian style into the Mughal ateliers which seem previously to have been small and consisting of artists trained in various centres including Bukhara 21 Samad probably worked on the unusually large painting of the Princes of the House of Timur British Museum which Humayun commissioned about 1550 55 in particular on the landscape background 22 In 1552 a group of single miniatures including work by the two Persians was included in a diplomatic gift to the ruler of Kashgar as Humayun worked to assemble support to regain his throne 20 Some of his works from this period are in a muraqqa or album in the library of the Golestan Palace in Tehran MSS 1663 4 still showing a thoroughly Safavid style 18 23 One of these miniatures depicts Akbar giving a miniature painting to his father Humayun and includes Samad s name on a portfolio the figure next to it is probably his portrait The image both uses a fully Persian style and includes thematic elements including the self portrait that are dazzling new departures in Islamic painting 24 Samad and Mir Sayyid Ali followed the emperor on his return to India only seven months before he died in 1556 They were retained by the fourteen year old Akbar who within a few years set about greatly expanding his court workshop 25 A drawing with muted colour inscribed with Samad s name in the Bodleian Library in Oxford depicts the arrest three days after Akbar s accession of Humayun s troublesome favourite Abdu l Ma ali who is seized from behind by a burly courtier 26 Both artists probably worked on the Tutinama the first major commission completed in the new reign where the disparate styles of the several artists used remain clear But Mir Sayyid Ali was initially given the supervision of Akbar s huge commission of the 1400 large illustrations for the Akbar Hamzanama which was to be fourteen years in the making 18 27 nbsp Abd al Samad miniature of 1588 nbsp Arghan Div Brings the Chest of Armour to Hamza from Volume 7 of the Hamzanama supervised by Samad In about 1572 Samad replaced Mir Sayyid Ali who returned to Persia as head of the imperial workshop 28 probably because under Sayyid the progress of the illustrations for the Hamzanama was too slow At this point the commission was seven years old and only four of the volumes were complete Under Samad s direction the remaining ten volumes were completed in another seven years It is uncertain whether Samad painted any of them himself 29 but the direction of Mughal painting increasingly came to follow the aims pursued by Abd al Samad It is likely that the increased central control that became evident by the Lahore period 1580s on can be attributed to this artist 1 Among the mostly Hindu artists trained by Samad were Daswanth and Basavan who went on to become famous Mughal painters 18 Despite his role in forging the new Mughal synthesis of Persian and Indian styles Samad s own works remain conservative with a great interest in detail and rather less in the new style of dramatic narrative and realism favoured by the young Akbar But by the 1590s elements of his style including a taste for detail were in favour though after his death Mughal painting turned in the direction of simpler compositions emphasising human interactions He did not have the gift for realistic portraiture which Mughal painting introduced to the Islamic miniature and unlike many Mughal artists shows few borrowings from the European prints and other art available in Akbar s court 30 In 1576 Akbar put Samad in charge of the Fatehpur Sikri mint in 1582 he was made overseer of commerce and the next year put in charge of the royal household 15 In 1584 Akbar made him dewan official in charge of finances of Multan He was given a mansab of 400 and honoured with the title of Shirin Qalam sweet pen 31 The moves may have been in recognition of his talent for administration but it has been suggested that Akbar preferred a more robust approach than that of his romanticised Persian style of painting 32 But he continued to paint and his last known work is a miniature of Khusraw hunting in the illustrations of the 1595 manuscript of the Khamsa of Nizami 18 33 Works with his name inscribed include a drawing of Akbar with a Dervish Aga Khan Museum c 1586 87 34 Another late work is a version of a famous Persian composition of two camels fighting by Behzad which an inscription says was done at the request of his son Sharif when he was infirm 35 He must have died in the last years of the century 36 He had two painter sons Muhammad Sharif 37 and one called Bizhad for the famous Persian artist Behzad c 1450 c 1535 38 Muhammad Sharif was a friend of the next emperor Jahangir and like his father was given important administrative roles a pattern unique among the many Mughal painter families 15 Not all scholars are convinced these sons were not just one as while Muhammad Sharif is relatively well documented Bizhad is apparently only known from inscriptions on miniatures 39 Notes edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abdul Samad a b Grove Brend 213 Brend 213 214 Brend 214 Brend 214 215 Welch attributions to Sultan Muhammed Plates 21 old woman complaining his attribution 25 Shirin Bathing inscribed and 32 33 Mi raj his attribution See also Titley 84 85 Brend 216 Brend 218 Blair Sheila S in Mirza Ali in Oxford Art Online Brend 232 and preceding pages Brend 225 230 Brend 230 232 Titley 192 Brend 214 Beach Blair amp Bloom say No inscribed works by Abd al Samad are known from the period when he worked in Safavid Iran though attributions have been proposed Brend 222 this is the painting The assassination of Chosroes Parvez a b c Beach Blair and Bloom Canby Sheila The Golden Age of Persian Art 1501 1722 Titley 103 says 1549 or around 1549 50 according to Crill and Jariwala 50 Beach Blair and Bloom say 1550 a b c d e f Abd us Samad Khwaja Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol I A Ak Bayes 15th ed Chicago Illinois Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2010 pp 18 ISBN 978 1 59339 837 8 Other sources say as early as 1548 a b Beach 49 Cambridge 15 21 quote p 21 see also Beach Chapter I Crill and Jariwala 50 Beach Blair amp Bloom Brend 225 226 Titley 188 Crill and Jariwala 52 53 Beach 60 61 Titley 191 Beach 61 Beach Blair and Bloom see also Soucek 170 172 Blochmann H tr 1927 reprint 1993 The Ain I Akbari by Abu l Fazl Allami Vol I Calcutta The Asiatic Society pp 554 5 Titley 192 193 Titley 193 Akbar with a Dervish Archived 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Aga Khan Museum c 1586 87 Soucek 172 Grove though Soucek 166 gives his dates as ca 1518 ca 1600 Crill and Jariwala 68 Titley 192 Soucek 170 Beach 144 note 8 thinks it possible they are the same while Soucek 170 172 is confident they were different References editBeach Milo Cleveland Early Mughal painting Harvard University Press 1987 ISBN 0 674 22185 0 ISBN 978 0 674 22185 7 Beach Blair and Bloom Beach Milo Cleveland updated by Blair Sheila S and Bloom Jonathan Abd al Samad in Oxford Art Online restricted access accessed 21 February 2011 see for fuller bibliography Cambridge Beach Milo Cleveland Mughal and Rajput painting Part 1 Volume 3 of The New Cambridge History of India Cambridge University Press 1992 ISBN 0 521 40027 9 ISBN 978 0 521 40027 5 Brend Barbara Another Career for Mirza Ali in Newman Andrew J ed Society and culture in the early modern Middle East studies on Iran in the Safavid period Volume 1998 Volume 46 of Islamic history and civilisation BRILL 2003 ISBN 90 04 12774 7 ISBN 978 90 04 12774 6 Crill Rosemary and Jariwala Kapil The Indian Portrait 1560 1860 National Portrait Gallery London 2010 ISBN 978 1 85514 409 5 Grove Oxford Art Online Various authors Indian sub VI 4 i Mughal ptg styles 16th 19th centuries restricted access accessed 21 February 2011 Soucek Priscilla P Persian artists in Mughal India in Muqarnas Volume 4 1988 BRILL ISBN 90 04 08155 0 ISBN 978 90 04 08155 0 Titley Norah M Persian Miniature Painting and its Influence on the Art of Turkey and India 1983 University of Texas Press 0292764847 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abd al Samad amp oldid 1217199090, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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