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Shri Brijnathji and Maharao Durjan Sal hunting

India, Rajasthan, Kota

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 692

Durjan Sal (r. 1723–56), the likely patron of this work, enters a forested rocky landscape at upper right, where he closes in for the kill of a rhinoceros. Other hunting parties charge from the left along two heavily grassed ravines separated by rocky outcrops. Wild buffalo gather around a mountain pond, and a pride of tigers and two lions has been entrapped, to be slain with arrows. Corps of beaters and huntsmen (shikaris) pound kettle drums (naqqara) and sound long trumpets (shehnais) to drive the prey into the trap. The principal participants are named by inscriptions within the painting, most of which are still legible. These include members of Durjan Sal’s family as well as some of his regal ancestors, underscoring the imagined nature of the painting. The hunt is led by the family tutelary deity Shri Brijnathji, giving supremacy to Lord Krishna as the true ruler of the Kota kingdom.

Shri Brijnathji and Maharao Durjan Sal hunting, Opaque watercolor and gold on cotton cloth, India, Rajasthan, Kota

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Photo © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford