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Nainsukh

Nainsukh (literally "Joy of the Eyes"; c. 1710[1] – 1778) was an Indian painter. He was the younger son of the painter Pandit Seu and, like his older brother Manaku of Guler, was an important practitioner of Pahari painting, and has been called "one of the most original and brilliant of Indian painters".[2]

Nainsukh
Self-Portrait at the age of 20
Born
Nainsukh

1710
Died1778
NationalityIndian
Known forPainting
MovementPahari painting
FamilyManaku (brother)
Raja Balwant Singh examining a painting with Nainsukh, 1745-1750. Rietberg Museum
Raja Balwant Singh making a Hindu puja, c. 1750
Raja Dhrub Dev assesses a horse; it was usual for horses to be shown off in front of a white sheet, to better appreciate their form

Around 1740 he left the family workshop in Guler and moved to Jasrota, where he painted most of his works for the local Rajput ruler Mian Zorowar Singh and his son Balwant Singh until the latter's death in 1763. This is the best known and documented phase of his career. Through his adaptation of elements of Mughal painting, he was a central force in the development of Pahari painting in the middle of the eighteenth century, bringing Mughal elements into what had been a school mainly concerned with Hindu religious subjects.[3] In his final phase at Basholi, from about 1765 until his death in 1778, Nainsukh returned to religious subject matter, but retaining his stylistic innovations. By the end of his career, with an active family workshop continuing his style, he was probably not executing the works himself anymore, but leaving them to his children and nephew as his artistic heirs. Such works are often ascribed to the Family of Nainsukh.[4]

According to B.N. Goswamy, the leading scholar of Nainsukh, "Devices and mannerisms associated with Nainsukh include: a preference for uncoloured grounds; shading through a light wash that imparts volume and weight to figures and groups; a fine horizontal line that separates ground from background; a rich green in which his landscapes are usually bathed; a bush with flat circular leaves that he often introduces; a peculiar loop of the long stem of a hooka; and a minor figure often introduced in a two-thirds profile."[5]

Although a great part of his work may be lost, around a hundred works by Nainsukh survive, many in both Indian and Western museums. Four of these bear his signature, and several have inscribed titles or comments.[6] Unusually for Pahari painting, some are dated.[7] There are at least two self-portraits, one from early in his career, and the other in a group scene with Balwant Singh, who is looking at a miniature, with the artist seated below him. Nainsukh peers over the raja's shoulder, perhaps offering his comments on the work, or ready to do so.[8]'

Nainsukh, a film based on his life directed by Amit Dutta released in 2010. Dutta has also made the short documentary films Gita Govinda (2013), Field-Trip (2013), and Scenes from a Sketchbook (2016) which cover different aspects of the painter's work.[9]

Early life

Nainsukh was born c. 1710 in Guler in modern Himachal Pradesh, India, then the capital of the pocket Guler State in the far north of India, in the foothills of the Himalayas. Here his father subsequently established a painting workshop. Along with his brother who was around ten years older than him, he was trained by his father in all aspects of painting from an early age. At this very time, examples of Moghul painting were increasingly coming to the valleys of the west Himalayas, and it seems probable that Nainsukh came into contact with the works of Mughul painters early on. Possibly he had worked at a Mughal court, where Hindu artists were common.[10]

Unlike his stylistically more conservative brother Manaku, who remained in Guler and closely conformed to the style of his father Seu,[11] Nainsukh introduced many of the novel elements of Moghul painting into the traditional Pahari style employed by his family. His early work is very poorly documented, and his distinctive style emerges almost fully formed in the next phase of his career.[12]

Jasrota and Raja Balwant Singh

 
Mian Mukund Dev of Jasrota out on a ride, ascribed to Nainsukh, c. 1740–1745 (Victoria & Albert Museum, London)
 
Portrait of a singer, 1750–55
 
The Poet Bihari Offers Homage to Radha and Krishna, 1760–65

Around 1740, Nainsukh left his father's workshop in Guler and moved to Jasrota. It is unknown whether he made this move because of his stylistic innovations or for economic reasons (Guler was probably too small for two painters of the calibre of Manaku and Nainsukh). In the small but wealthy principality of Jasrota, Nainsukh worked for various patrons.[13]

The most important was Raja Balwant Singh (1724–1763), who employed him for almost twenty years, until his untimely death. His work for Balwant Singh is his most celebrated, showing unusually intimate, informal, and sometimes downright unflattering scenes of the raja going about his daily round of pleasures. Balwant Singh ranked very low in the ranks of Hindu princes, and was barely a ruler as opposed to a landowner.[14] The hill states gained in prosperity from the turmoil to the south after the capture of Dehli by the Persian Nadir Shah in 1739 diverted trade routes their way.[15]

The relationship between the art-loving Balwant Singh and Nainsukh must have been very close, since Nainsukh seems to have been employed by him often and able to see and record intimate scenes of his everyday life. Balwant Singh must have lacked the normal attitude of other Indian royalty to only allow images to be produced that displayed the magnificence of his life; who between patron and painter first suggested this very informal approach is unknown. As well as some more conventional scenes, such as showing the raja hunting with a retinue or watching dancers, paintings by Nainsukh show the raja getting his beard trimmed, writing a letter, performing a puja, looking out of a palace window, sitting in front of the fire wrapped in a blanket, or smoking a hookah and inspecting a painting.[16] When Balwant Singh had to spend a period in exile in Guler Nainsukh accompanied him.[17]

It is characteristic of Nainsukh that he captures such specific situations and settings with great sensitivity. In his depictions of scenes, he moved away from stylised types in favour of realistic depictions.[18] In his naturalistic depiction of buildings and books and his efforts to depict depth, Nainsukh shows the influence of his study of works by Mughal painters. Intimate depictions of Rajput rulers were not entirely unprecedented; Raja Sidhi Sen, 10th Raja of Mandi (died 1727) had had many images of himself painted, but these emphasized what was evidently a very impressive physique, and evoked the tradition of the mahapurusha, or supernaturally perfect being. In one portrait, according to B.N. Goswamy, the raja "combines an extreme informality of appearance with great majesty of bearing", a very different effect from that of Nainsukh's paintings.[19]

The close relationship between Nainsukh and Balwant Singh is also shown by the fact that after his master's early death in 1763, he took his ashes to Haridwar along with his family's possessions, as he recorded in a long entry in the register of the pilgrimage's destination, including a drawing in pen.[20] Haridwar is one of the Sapta Puri or "Seven Holy Places" of Hinduism, and the ashes were to be cast on the river Ganges in a common funerary ritual.[21] This register record is an important source for the reconstruction of Nainsukh's life and work, which was previously clouded by considerable uncertainty, and his entry demonstrates the growing perception by artists of their importance. He also painted a miniature which probably shows the raja's ashes, ceremonially arranged in a screen tent in the countryside with two attendants, presumably at a resting place while on their way to Haridwar.[22]

Basohli, and the family workshop

 
Radha and Krishna, c. 1775, "first generation after Nainsukh"
 
King Dasharatha Approaches the Sulking Kaikeyi's Chamber, from the Ramayana, Nainsukh

After Balwant Singh's death in 1763, around 1765 Nainsukh moved and entered the service of Amrit Pal (ruled 1757–1778),[23] a nephew of Balwant Singh and ruler of Basohli, a very devout Hindu who eventually abdicated the throne in order to devote himself to a life of meditation. For him, Nainsukh produced entirely different kinds of work, turning to the more typical Pahari subject matter of illustrating poems recounting the stories from the great Hindu religious epics. His later work is less well known than that of his Jasrota period, and in the opinion of many scholars under-rated.[24] He began to make drawings for a set of illustrations to the Gita Govinda, a famous poem on the earthly exploits of Krishna. Some late sheets by Nainsukh that were not taken beyond the stage of preliminary drawings have comments by priests and scholars on the appropriateness of the images and their faithfulness to the texts they illustrate. This indicates that the religious function of such illustrations remained important.[25]

 
Family of Nainsukh, Heroine Rushing to Her Lover (Abhisarika Nayika) Late 18th century

In the family workshop which he headed in Basohli toward the end of his life, Nainsukh appear to have collaborated with his nephew Fattu (c. 1725 – 1785, son of Manaku) and his youngest son Ranjha (c. 1750 – 1830). He had three other sons: Kama (c. 1735 – c. 1810), Gaudhu (c. 1740 – 1820) and Nikka (c. 1745 – 1833).[26] Nainsukh died in Basohli in 1778.[27] Members of the family spread out in the region, carrying the family style throughout the hills.[28]

They too became painters who continued to work in the naturalistic and graceful Pahari style developed by Nainsukh. These are often attributed to the "Family of Nainsukh", as individual artists are hard to identify. The family workshop continued into the 19th century, and art historians tend to divide their work into categories such as the "first generation after Nainsukh" (or "after Nainsukh and Manaku").[29]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Crill and Jariwala, 140 say "c. 1710–20" on the birth date, see also Pahari-Meister, p. 268.
  2. ^ Kossak, 99
  3. ^ Grove; Guy, 160; Harle, 411-12
  4. ^ Beach, 199–200
  5. ^ Grove
  6. ^ A list of his works in B.N. Goswamy, Eberhard Fischer: Nainsukh of Guler. In: Milo C. Beach, Eberhard Fischer, B.N. Goswamy (Hrsg.): Masters of Indian Painting. Artibus Asiae Publishers, Zürich 2011, Vol. 2, 689–694.
  7. ^ Harle, 411
  8. ^ The latter painting (Museum Reitberg, Zurich) was exhibited in two recent exhibitions: #43 in London, Crill and Jariwala, 140–141, and # 83 in New York, Guy, 162; a detail of the earlier is shown at Guy, 160
  9. ^ "Scenes from a Sketchbook | Amit Dutta's Cinematic Museum". watch.eventive.org. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  10. ^ Crill and Jaliwala, 35–36; Grove
  11. ^ Guy, 153–159
  12. ^ Beach, 196–202; Grove; Crill and Jaliwala, 35–36
  13. ^ Guy, 160
  14. ^ Grove; Crill and Jariwala, 140; Harle, 411; Reila. Balwant Singh's exact status is rather confused.
  15. ^ Harle, 411
  16. ^ Grove; Crill and Jariwala, 36–37, 140; Harle, 411-12
  17. ^ Guy, 162
  18. ^ Grove; Crill and Jariwala, 140
  19. ^ B.N. Goswamy, "Raja Sidhi Sen of Mandi; An Informal Portrait", in The Spirit of Indian Painting: Close Encounters with 100 Great Works 1100–1900, 2014, Penguin UK, ISBN 9351188620, 9789351188629
  20. ^ Grove, see also B. N. Goswamy: Pahari Painting: The Family as the Basis of Style. In: Marg. Vol 21, No. 4, 1968, pp. 17–62 & Pahari-Meister, pp. 269–270.
  21. ^ Guy, 163, # 84, online
  22. ^ Guy, 163, # 84, online
  23. ^ Grove
  24. ^ Kossak, 99
  25. ^ Beach, 202
  26. ^ Pahari-Meister, 307.
  27. ^ Kossak, 99
  28. ^ Beach, 199
  29. ^ As in Guy, #s 87–94; Grove

References

  • Beach, Milo Cleveland, Mughal and Rajput Painting, Part 1, Volume 3, The New Cambridge History of India, 1992, Cambridge University Press
  • Crill, Rosemary, and Jariwala, Kapil. The Indian Portrait, 1560–1860, National Portrait Gallery, London, 2010, ISBN 9781855144095
  • "Grove", B. N. Goswamy. "Nainsukh." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press, accessed 7 June 2015, subscription required
  • Guy, John, Britschgi, Jorrit, Wonder of the Age: Master Painters of India, 1100–1900, 2011, Metropolitan Museum of Art, ISBN 1588394301, 9781588394309
  • B.N. Goswamy, Eberhard Fischer: Pahari-Meister: Höfische Malerei aus den Bergen Nord-Indiens. Museum Rietberg, Zürich 1990, ISBN 3-907070-30-5.
  • Harle, J.C., The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent, 2nd edn. 1994, Yale University Press Pelican History of Art, ISBN 0300062176
  • Kossak, Steven. (1997). Indian court painting, 16th–19th century. Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0870997831
  • Reila, Anil, The Indian Portrait: An artistic journey from miniature to modern, 2010, Archer Art Gallery, google books

Further reading

  • B.N. Goswamy, Eberhard Fischer: "Nainsukh of Guler", in: Milo C. Beach, Eberhard Fischer, B.N. Goswamy (Ed.): Masters of Indian Painting, Artibus Asiae Publishers, Zürich 2011, ISBN 978-3-907077-50-4, pp. 659–686 (Artibus Asiae: Supplementum. Vol 48.2).
  • B.N. Goswamy: Nainsukh of Guler: A great Indian Painter from a Small Hill-State. Museum Rietberg, Zürich 1997, ISBN 3-907070-76-3 (Artibus Asiae: Supplementum. Vol XLI).

nainsukh, 2010, film, film, literally, eyes, 1710, 1778, indian, painter, younger, painter, pandit, like, older, brother, manaku, guler, important, practitioner, pahari, painting, been, called, most, original, brilliant, indian, painters, self, portrait, 20bor. For the 2010 film see Nainsukh film Nainsukh literally Joy of the Eyes c 1710 1 1778 was an Indian painter He was the younger son of the painter Pandit Seu and like his older brother Manaku of Guler was an important practitioner of Pahari painting and has been called one of the most original and brilliant of Indian painters 2 NainsukhSelf Portrait at the age of 20BornNainsukh1710Died1778NationalityIndianKnown forPaintingMovementPahari paintingFamilyManaku brother Raja Balwant Singh examining a painting with Nainsukh 1745 1750 Rietberg Museum Raja Balwant Singh making a Hindu puja c 1750 Raja Dhrub Dev assesses a horse it was usual for horses to be shown off in front of a white sheet to better appreciate their form Around 1740 he left the family workshop in Guler and moved to Jasrota where he painted most of his works for the local Rajput ruler Mian Zorowar Singh and his son Balwant Singh until the latter s death in 1763 This is the best known and documented phase of his career Through his adaptation of elements of Mughal painting he was a central force in the development of Pahari painting in the middle of the eighteenth century bringing Mughal elements into what had been a school mainly concerned with Hindu religious subjects 3 In his final phase at Basholi from about 1765 until his death in 1778 Nainsukh returned to religious subject matter but retaining his stylistic innovations By the end of his career with an active family workshop continuing his style he was probably not executing the works himself anymore but leaving them to his children and nephew as his artistic heirs Such works are often ascribed to the Family of Nainsukh 4 According to B N Goswamy the leading scholar of Nainsukh Devices and mannerisms associated with Nainsukh include a preference for uncoloured grounds shading through a light wash that imparts volume and weight to figures and groups a fine horizontal line that separates ground from background a rich green in which his landscapes are usually bathed a bush with flat circular leaves that he often introduces a peculiar loop of the long stem of a hooka and a minor figure often introduced in a two thirds profile 5 Although a great part of his work may be lost around a hundred works by Nainsukh survive many in both Indian and Western museums Four of these bear his signature and several have inscribed titles or comments 6 Unusually for Pahari painting some are dated 7 There are at least two self portraits one from early in his career and the other in a group scene with Balwant Singh who is looking at a miniature with the artist seated below him Nainsukh peers over the raja s shoulder perhaps offering his comments on the work or ready to do so 8 Nainsukh a film based on his life directed by Amit Dutta released in 2010 Dutta has also made the short documentary films Gita Govinda 2013 Field Trip 2013 and Scenes from a Sketchbook 2016 which cover different aspects of the painter s work 9 Contents 1 Early life 2 Jasrota and Raja Balwant Singh 3 Basohli and the family workshop 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingEarly life EditNainsukh was born c 1710 in Guler in modern Himachal Pradesh India then the capital of the pocket Guler State in the far north of India in the foothills of the Himalayas Here his father subsequently established a painting workshop Along with his brother who was around ten years older than him he was trained by his father in all aspects of painting from an early age At this very time examples of Moghul painting were increasingly coming to the valleys of the west Himalayas and it seems probable that Nainsukh came into contact with the works of Mughul painters early on Possibly he had worked at a Mughal court where Hindu artists were common 10 Unlike his stylistically more conservative brother Manaku who remained in Guler and closely conformed to the style of his father Seu 11 Nainsukh introduced many of the novel elements of Moghul painting into the traditional Pahari style employed by his family His early work is very poorly documented and his distinctive style emerges almost fully formed in the next phase of his career 12 Jasrota and Raja Balwant Singh Edit Mian Mukund Dev of Jasrota out on a ride ascribed to Nainsukh c 1740 1745 Victoria amp Albert Museum London Portrait of a singer 1750 55 The Poet Bihari Offers Homage to Radha and Krishna 1760 65 Around 1740 Nainsukh left his father s workshop in Guler and moved to Jasrota It is unknown whether he made this move because of his stylistic innovations or for economic reasons Guler was probably too small for two painters of the calibre of Manaku and Nainsukh In the small but wealthy principality of Jasrota Nainsukh worked for various patrons 13 The most important was Raja Balwant Singh 1724 1763 who employed him for almost twenty years until his untimely death His work for Balwant Singh is his most celebrated showing unusually intimate informal and sometimes downright unflattering scenes of the raja going about his daily round of pleasures Balwant Singh ranked very low in the ranks of Hindu princes and was barely a ruler as opposed to a landowner 14 The hill states gained in prosperity from the turmoil to the south after the capture of Dehli by the Persian Nadir Shah in 1739 diverted trade routes their way 15 The relationship between the art loving Balwant Singh and Nainsukh must have been very close since Nainsukh seems to have been employed by him often and able to see and record intimate scenes of his everyday life Balwant Singh must have lacked the normal attitude of other Indian royalty to only allow images to be produced that displayed the magnificence of his life who between patron and painter first suggested this very informal approach is unknown As well as some more conventional scenes such as showing the raja hunting with a retinue or watching dancers paintings by Nainsukh show the raja getting his beard trimmed writing a letter performing a puja looking out of a palace window sitting in front of the fire wrapped in a blanket or smoking a hookah and inspecting a painting 16 When Balwant Singh had to spend a period in exile in Guler Nainsukh accompanied him 17 It is characteristic of Nainsukh that he captures such specific situations and settings with great sensitivity In his depictions of scenes he moved away from stylised types in favour of realistic depictions 18 In his naturalistic depiction of buildings and books and his efforts to depict depth Nainsukh shows the influence of his study of works by Mughal painters Intimate depictions of Rajput rulers were not entirely unprecedented Raja Sidhi Sen 10th Raja of Mandi died 1727 had had many images of himself painted but these emphasized what was evidently a very impressive physique and evoked the tradition of the mahapurusha or supernaturally perfect being In one portrait according to B N Goswamy the raja combines an extreme informality of appearance with great majesty of bearing a very different effect from that of Nainsukh s paintings 19 The close relationship between Nainsukh and Balwant Singh is also shown by the fact that after his master s early death in 1763 he took his ashes to Haridwar along with his family s possessions as he recorded in a long entry in the register of the pilgrimage s destination including a drawing in pen 20 Haridwar is one of the Sapta Puri or Seven Holy Places of Hinduism and the ashes were to be cast on the river Ganges in a common funerary ritual 21 This register record is an important source for the reconstruction of Nainsukh s life and work which was previously clouded by considerable uncertainty and his entry demonstrates the growing perception by artists of their importance He also painted a miniature which probably shows the raja s ashes ceremonially arranged in a screen tent in the countryside with two attendants presumably at a resting place while on their way to Haridwar 22 Basohli and the family workshop Edit Radha and Krishna c 1775 first generation after Nainsukh King Dasharatha Approaches the Sulking Kaikeyi s Chamber from the Ramayana Nainsukh After Balwant Singh s death in 1763 around 1765 Nainsukh moved and entered the service of Amrit Pal ruled 1757 1778 23 a nephew of Balwant Singh and ruler of Basohli a very devout Hindu who eventually abdicated the throne in order to devote himself to a life of meditation For him Nainsukh produced entirely different kinds of work turning to the more typical Pahari subject matter of illustrating poems recounting the stories from the great Hindu religious epics His later work is less well known than that of his Jasrota period and in the opinion of many scholars under rated 24 He began to make drawings for a set of illustrations to the Gita Govinda a famous poem on the earthly exploits of Krishna Some late sheets by Nainsukh that were not taken beyond the stage of preliminary drawings have comments by priests and scholars on the appropriateness of the images and their faithfulness to the texts they illustrate This indicates that the religious function of such illustrations remained important 25 Family of Nainsukh Heroine Rushing to Her Lover Abhisarika Nayika Late 18th century In the family workshop which he headed in Basohli toward the end of his life Nainsukh appear to have collaborated with his nephew Fattu c 1725 1785 son of Manaku and his youngest son Ranjha c 1750 1830 He had three other sons Kama c 1735 c 1810 Gaudhu c 1740 1820 and Nikka c 1745 1833 26 Nainsukh died in Basohli in 1778 27 Members of the family spread out in the region carrying the family style throughout the hills 28 They too became painters who continued to work in the naturalistic and graceful Pahari style developed by Nainsukh These are often attributed to the Family of Nainsukh as individual artists are hard to identify The family workshop continued into the 19th century and art historians tend to divide their work into categories such as the first generation after Nainsukh or after Nainsukh and Manaku 29 Gallery Edit The Musical Mode Surmananda The Musical Mode Gauri Raja Balwant Singh watches performers Shiva and Parvati Seated on Mount KailasaSee also EditList of Indian paintersNotes Edit Crill and Jariwala 140 say c 1710 20 on the birth date see also Pahari Meister p 268 Kossak 99 Grove Guy 160 Harle 411 12 Beach 199 200 Grove A list of his works in B N Goswamy Eberhard Fischer Nainsukh of Guler In Milo C Beach Eberhard Fischer B N Goswamy Hrsg Masters of Indian Painting Artibus Asiae Publishers Zurich 2011 Vol 2 689 694 Harle 411 The latter painting Museum Reitberg Zurich was exhibited in two recent exhibitions 43 in London Crill and Jariwala 140 141 and 83 in New York Guy 162 a detail of the earlier is shown at Guy 160 Scenes from a Sketchbook Amit Dutta s Cinematic Museum watch eventive org Retrieved 30 May 2021 Crill and Jaliwala 35 36 Grove Guy 153 159 Beach 196 202 Grove Crill and Jaliwala 35 36 Guy 160 Grove Crill and Jariwala 140 Harle 411 Reila Balwant Singh s exact status is rather confused Harle 411 Grove Crill and Jariwala 36 37 140 Harle 411 12 Guy 162 Grove Crill and Jariwala 140 B N Goswamy Raja Sidhi Sen of Mandi An Informal Portrait in The Spirit of Indian Painting Close Encounters with 100 Great Works 1100 1900 2014 Penguin UK ISBN 9351188620 9789351188629 Grove see also B N Goswamy Pahari Painting The Family as the Basis of Style In Marg Vol 21 No 4 1968 pp 17 62 amp Pahari Meister pp 269 270 Guy 163 84 online Guy 163 84 online Grove Kossak 99 Beach 202 Pahari Meister 307 Kossak 99 Beach 199 As in Guy s 87 94 GroveReferences Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nainsukh Beach Milo Cleveland Mughal and Rajput Painting Part 1 Volume 3 The New Cambridge History of India 1992 Cambridge University Press Crill Rosemary and Jariwala Kapil The Indian Portrait 1560 1860 National Portrait Gallery London 2010 ISBN 9781855144095 Grove B N Goswamy Nainsukh Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online Oxford University Press accessed 7 June 2015 subscription required Guy John Britschgi Jorrit Wonder of the Age Master Painters of India 1100 1900 2011 Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 1588394301 9781588394309 B N Goswamy Eberhard Fischer Pahari Meister Hofische Malerei aus den Bergen Nord Indiens Museum Rietberg Zurich 1990 ISBN 3 907070 30 5 Harle J C The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent 2nd edn 1994 Yale University Press Pelican History of Art ISBN 0300062176 Kossak Steven 1997 Indian court painting 16th 19th century Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0870997831 Reila Anil The Indian Portrait An artistic journey from miniature to modern 2010 Archer Art Gallery google booksFurther reading EditB N Goswamy Eberhard Fischer Nainsukh of Guler in Milo C Beach Eberhard Fischer B N Goswamy Ed Masters of Indian Painting Artibus Asiae Publishers Zurich 2011 ISBN 978 3 907077 50 4 pp 659 686 Artibus Asiae Supplementum Vol 48 2 B N Goswamy Nainsukh of Guler A great Indian Painter from a Small Hill State Museum Rietberg Zurich 1997 ISBN 3 907070 76 3 Artibus Asiae Supplementum Vol XLI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nainsukh amp oldid 1124651984, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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