Young Man in Portuguese Dress

Not on view

The increased presence of Europeans in Asia during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries is recorded in these two works. In Safavid-period painting from Iran, European figures generally appear in either erotic scenes or mocking portraits. The latter often captured aspects of European dress and behavior that the Iranians found comical, such as men doting on pet dogs. The figure in Young Man in Portuguese Dress is unique, as it seems to portray a beautiful Iranian court youth wearing Portuguese garb—perhaps the record of a passing trend. In India the foreign presence was marked in a different way. The painting Alexander Is Lowered into the Sea illustrates a luxury copy of a poem by Indian poet Amir Khusrau Dihlavi (1253–1325) that references the life of Alexander the Great. The Macedonian conqueror is shown being lowered in a glass diving bell into the sea, where he spent one hundred days as a test of his faith. The appearance of Portuguese men in the boats is surprising, but it has been suggested that the strong connection in Mughal minds between Europeans and shipping prowess explains their inclusion.

Young Man in Portuguese Dress, Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper

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