The Hamzanama relates the story of Hamza, an uncle of the prophet Mohammad and an ardent defender of the Muslim faith. In this scene, Assad ibn Kariba, a supporter of Hamza shown dressed in an orange jama, takes an army of unbelievers (non-Muslims) by surprise in a night attack. In the midst of the chaos, the unbelievers attack and kill one another. The drama-filled story of the Hamzanama was a favorite of the Mughal emperor Akbar, who commissioned this magnificent manuscript in 1562. Composed of 1400 illustrations and bound into several volumes, the work took nearly one hundred artists fifteen years to complete.
#7952. Assad Ibn Kariba Launches a Night Attack on the Camp of Malik Iraj, Folio from a Hamzanama (The Adventures of Hamza), Part 1
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7952. Assad Ibn Kariba Launches a Night Attack on the Camp of Malik Iraj, Folio from a Hamzanama (The Adventures of Hamza), Part 1
7953. Assad Ibn Kariba Launches a Night Attack on the Camp of Malik Iraj, Folio from a Hamzanama (The Adventures of Hamza), Part 2
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18.44.1
18.44.1
Artwork Details
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Title:"Assad Ibn Kariba Launches a Night Attack on the Camp of Malik Iraj", Folio from a Hamzanama (The Adventures of Hamza)
Artist:Attributed to Basavana
Artist: Attributed to Shravana
Artist: Attributed to Tara (Indian, active mid-16th century)
Date:ca. 1564–69
Geography:Attributed to India. Found Kashmir
Medium:Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on cloth; mounted on paper
Dimensions:Overall painting: H. 27 in (68.6 cm) W. 21 1/4 in. (54 cm) Frame: H. 30 in. (76.2 cm) W. 37 1/4 in. (94.6 cm) D. 2 in. (5.1 cm)
Classification:Codices
Credit Line:Rogers Fund, 1918
Object Number:18.44.1
Assad Ibn Kariba Attacks the Army of Iraj Suddenly by Night
This illustration displays varied characteristics of style found in the immense Hamza-nama manuscript for which it was made. The painting is divided into a foreground, a middle ground, and a background, with the figures and objects in each field smaller than those in the field before. Thus, although the space is not totally coherent, an impression of spatial recession is created. The action is spread across the three zones, but the changes in scale, with the most important scene at the fore, help clarify the narrative. Stylistic elements of Persian inspiration include the ovoid faces with refined features and the stylized rock forms. Some of the faces are more naturalistic, however; they convey that sense of the event's irmnediacy so highly valued by Mughal artists.
Steven M. Kossak in [Kossak 1997]
Asad Karb Launches a Night Attack on the Camp of Malik Iraj
Combat sometimes occasions a special kind of frenzy, when men can no longer remember why or against whom they must fight, but are compelled by some unspeakable primal rage to lash out blindly against everyone and everything around them. Such morally ambivalent violence is relatively rare in the , in which rather clear distinctions between the righteous and the depraved are the norm.
The text that describes the circumstances of this scene of carnage is now missing, but both the caption and the text that follows mention a night raid carried out by Pahlavan Asad against Malik Iraj's camp. Asad leads the attack against Iraj, a sun-worshipper, albeit one with persistent sympathy for Hamza's cause. But the darkness that ostensibly provides cover for Asad's men also causes them to lose sight of reason, and the raid soon degenerates into a bloodbath.
"...When the benighted infidels opened their eyes and recognized each other, they saw that strangers in their midst were as rare as God's love was among them. They had killed so many of their own that it was beyond reckoning."
Asad himself leaves the scene and does not return to his fortress that night, and thus is spared Iraj's wrath the next morning.
For a scene purportedly depicting wanton violence, this illustration has a curiously placid quality. Soldiers—including two only semi-dressed to indicate that they have been roused from their beds—fight in close quarters amid clusters of tents, but their numbers are quite modest, and there is no sign whatsoever of rampant bloodletting. For the most part, the warfare seems routine, as soldiers insde and outside the fortress exchange volleys of arrows and musket fire. Indeed, some actions—a man winding his turban in the lower left or another grasping the reins of a donkey in the center of the painting—are remarkably mundane. The setting contributes to the paradoxical sense of order, counteracting hints of rough-and-tumble combat with stabilizing tents and fortress walls. And occupying the center of the composition is the mounted Asad, who despite his raised sword and the approach of an enemy soldier, is the very picture of aloof composure.
The handsome Asad represents a youthful princely type found throughout the manuscript; his closest counterparts are the orange-clad figure of Qasim/Hamza in the Brooklyn Museum of Art (no. 24.47, cat. 48 in this volume) and the mounted Farrukh-Nizhad in another illustration attributed here to Basavana.[1] Like the aforementioned Farrukh-Nizhad this figure of Asad is dressed in a sensitively modeled orange , has a long sword suspended from his belt by a golden chain, and tenders the chains of his horse at chest height. The two faces are exceedingly similar, the only difference being that Asad's features appear more delicate, an impression conveyed by his lightly rendered eyes and wispy hair, and probably accentuated by the considerable surface abrasion in the area. A better-preserved example of this same figure type, the spear-holder dressed in green at lower left, corroborates Basavana's involvement in this painting. The artist probably supplied the billowing rocks and the tree at the right, the latter graced by two superb herons.
The familiar designs of the tents and the trappings of Iraj's camp are strong indications that they are the work of Shravana, an artist who collaborated with Basavana on two other camp scenes.[2] Most of the figures, however, can be attributed to a third artist, Tara, whose style at this time is documented in an ascribed painting in the ,[3] and who later collaborated with Basavana on two paintnigs in the manuscript in the Victoria and Albert Museum.[4] Tara likes figures with ample and often unruly mustaches and beards; he also uses large, glaring eyes and bared teeth to create an impressive range of explicit and energetic expressions.
John Seyller in [Seyler et al. 2002]
Footnotes:
1. MAK, Vienna, B.I. 8770/46 published in Egger, Gerhart, Graz: Akademische Druck-u. Verlagenstalt, 1974, pl. 42 and the Reconstruction, no. 89.
2. MAK, Vienna, B.I. 8770/22 and 8770/58. See Reconstruction, nos. 84 and 100.
3. Folio 60b; Simsar, Muhammad, transl. and ed. Graz: Akademische Druck u. Verlagsanhalt, 1978, pl. 13; and Milo Beach, ,Cambridge. Cambridge University Press, 1992, fig. 9.
4. Victoria and Albert Museum, London, I.S. 2-1896, nos 17/117 and 61/117; Sen, Geeti, . Varanasi: Lustre press, 1984, pls. 20 and 44.
Assad, Son of Kariba, Makes a Surprise Night Attack on Iraj's Army
This painting illustrated an episode in the rich cycle of tales of exciting exploits and heroic deeds allegedly centered around the life of Hamzeh, a paternal uncle of the Prophet. The manuscript, of which less than 150 leaves are known today, originally, according to contemporary sources, contained 1400 paintings on cotton in twelve unbound volumes. The large size enabled an audience to view the illustration as it was held up, while the text, written on paper and pasted to the reverse (except on a very few pages where the text appears on the same side as the picture), was read aloud. These stories were favorites of the emperor Akbar as a youth, and this epic was the first major work of his studio, which was the crucible for the Mughal style of painting. According to contemporary accounts, Mir Sayyid 'Ali and 'Abd al-Samad, the two Persian masters from the court of Shah Tamasp who had accompanied Humayun, Akbar's father, on his return from exile in Tabriz, were in charge of the production, with fifty painters working under them. The fusion of stylistic sources—Persian, Indian, Central Asian, and even European—reflects the cosmopolitan character of Akbar's court, where a variety of religious beliefs and ethnic origins came together, to the enrichment of Mughal culture. The paintings from the Hanzanama, in their stirring action, forthright vigor, and shrewd powers of observation, mirror the character of Akbar himself.
Marie Lukens Swietochowski in [Berlin 1981]
Assad Ibn Kariba Attacks the Army of Iraj Suddenly by Night
Akbar's father, Humayun, lost the fragile empire founded by his father, Babur, and took refuge at the Safavid court at Tabriz. On his victorious return he brought two renowned Persian artists with him, Mir Sayyid 'Ali and 'Abd al-Samad, founders of the royal Mughal workshop. One of the earliest and certainly the most ambitious projects of the fledging atelier was the manuscript with fourteen hundred illustrations on cotton, generally with the text on paper pasted on the other side, in twelve unbound volumes, of which only about 150 have survived. The adventures of Amir Hamza are exciting and action filled tales alledgedly based on the life of the uncle of the Prophet, Hamza, conflated with the legendary life of another hero of the same name from Sistan. They reflect the energy, vigor, and love of action of Akbar himself, but also his political acumen, in the blending of Persian and Indian elements, as well as his discening patron's eye and demand for the highest quality.
Here the vigor exuded by the rough and tumble of an army camp contrasts with the delicate floral patterns of carpets and canopies, the rich variety of architecture in the walled town and the exquisidly observed and painted resting cranes in the tree at the right.
Marie Lukens Swietochowski in [Walker et al. 1994]
Inscription: Inscribed in Persian in nasta'liq script: Asad attacks Iraj at night and assails [his army] with arrows
Lockwood de Forest (American), New York (until 1918; sold to MMA)
National Arts Club of New York City. "Chinese and Indian Art," December 10, 1942–January 24, 1943, no catalogue.
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Masterpieces of Fifty Centuries," November 14, 1970–June 1, 1971, no. 159.
Berlin. Museum für Islamische Kunst, Pergamonmuseum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. "The Arts of Islam. Masterpieces from the M.M.A.," June 15, 1981–August 8, 1981, no. 121.
Mexico City. Colegio de San Ildefonso. "Arte Islámico del Museo Metropolitano de Arte de Nueva York," September 30, 1994–January 8, 1995, no. 23.
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Indian Court Painting: 16th–19th Century," March 25–July 6, 1997, no. 8.
Washington. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. "The Adventures of Hamza," June 26, 2002–September 29, 2002, no. 82.
New York. Brooklyn Museum. "The Adventures of Hamza," November 1, 2002–January 26, 2003, no. 82.
London. Royal Academy of Arts. "The Adventures of Hamza," March 15, 2003–June 8, 2003, no. 82.
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Illustrated Manuscripts in India: Late 13th–early 17th Century," 2004.
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Wonder of the Age: Master Painters of India, 1100–1900," September 26, 2011–January 8, 2012.
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Power and Piety: Islamic Talismans on the Battlefield," August 29, 2016–February 13, 2017, no catalogue.
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Making The Met, 1870–2020," August 29, 2020–January 3, 2021.
Comstock, Helen, ed. "The Romance of Amir Hamzah." International Studio LXXX (1925). pp. 349–57, ill. pp. 352, 354 (b/w).
Dimand, Maurice S. A Handbook of Muhammedan Decorative Arts. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1930. pp. 54–55, ill. fig. 22 (b/w).
Dimand, Maurice S. A Handbook of Muhammadan Art. 2nd rev. and enl. ed. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1944. p. 59, ill. fig. 31 (b/w).
The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Masterpieces of Fifty Centuries: the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., 1970. no. 159, p. 181, ill. (b/w).
Swietochowski, Marie, and Richard Ettinghausen. "Islamic Painting." Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, n.s., vol. 36, no. 2 (Autumn 1978). p. 48, ill. b/w.
"Masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York." In The Arts of Islam. Berlin, 1981. no. 121, pp. 286–87, ill. (color).
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Daniel S. Walker, Arturo Ponce Guadián, Sussan Babaie, Stefano Carboni, Aimee Froom, Marie Lukens Swietochowski, Tomoko Masuya, Annie Christine Daskalakis-Matthews, Abdallah Kahli, and Rochelle Kessler. "Colegio de San Ildefonso, Septiembre de 1994–Enero de 1995." In Arte Islámico del Museo Metropolitano de Arte de Nueva York. Mexico City: Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes, 1994. no. 23, pp. 90–91, ill. (color).
Kossak, Steven M., ed. Indian Court Painting 16th–19th century. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1997. no. 8, pp. 34–35, ill. (color).
Seyller, John, Thackston M. Wheeler, Ebba Koch, Antoinette Owen, and Rainald Franz. The Adventures of Hamza. Washington, D.C.; London: Azimuth Editions, 2002. no. 82, pp. 244–45, 271, ill. (color).
Bayer, Andrea, and Laura D. Corey, ed. Making the Met, 1870–2020. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2020. pp. 205–6, ill. fig. 220.
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