Maharaja Kirpal Pal of Basohli smoking

India, Mankot, Punjab Hills

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 693

As Basohli’s founder, Bhupat Pal was a fierce champion for his kingdom, and clearly his reputation lived on well after his death, since this portrait was painted some fifty years after his assassination in Delhi, in 1635. It was likely commissioned by his son and successor, Kirpal Pal (r. ca. 1678–93) who in this portrait is shown sitting cross-legged on a striped dhurrie rug while enjoying his own hookah. One of the finest examples of seventeenth-century Pahari portraiture, it captures the power of this style at its peak.
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Maharaja Kirpal Pal of Basohli smoking, Opaque watercolor, gold and silver on paper, India, Mankot, Punjab Hills

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