Skip to main content
Service phase: Beta

This is a new way to search our records, which we're still working on. Alternatively you can search our existing catalogue, Discovery.

Item

Raja Anand Dev of Bahu and Raja Dhrub Dev of Jammu. Artist(s): Patak Chand (fl. c.1770).

Catalogue reference: Johnson 1,18

What’s it about?

This record is about the Raja Anand Dev of Bahu and Raja Dhrub Dev of Jammu. Artist(s): Patak Chand (fl. c.1770). dating from c 1770.

Access information is unavailable

Sorry, information for accessing this record is currently unavailable online. Please try again later.

Full description and record details

Reference
Johnson 1,18
Title
Raja Anand Dev of Bahu and Raja Dhrub Dev of Jammu. Artist(s): Patak Chand (fl. c.1770).
Date
c 1770
Description

Raja Anand Dev (c.1690-c.1715) and Raja Dhrub Dev (1703-35). By Patak Chand, Faizabad, c.1770. Richard Johnson Collection. Purchased 1807. Inscribed above right in Persian: 'tasvir-i raja anant dev raja-i janbu' (picture of Raja Anand Dev, Raja of Jammu); above left: 'tasvir-i raja dhrup dev, baradar-i haqiqi-i raja-i janbu' (picture of Raja Dhrub Dev, own (or rightful) brother of the Raja of Jammu); below: 'amal-i patak chand' (the work of Patak Chand). Gouache with gold; on an album page with blue and pink borders sprinkled with gold. 218 by 314 mm; page 372 by 496 mm. Reproduced: W.G. Archer (1973), II, 134. Raja Anand Dev of Bahu (Jammu) is seated smoking with Raja Dhrub Dev of Jammu. Anand Dev is on the right, dressed in a decorated white jama and gold turban and 'patka,' with an attendant 'chauri-'bearer behind him in a pink-striped jama. Dhrub Dev is on the left, dressed in trousers beneath a diaphanous coat tied loosely with a gold 'patka,' and his 'chauri'-bearer is in a yellow jama. Cushions and a pale yellow carpet are spread on the terrace. There is a formal line of trees beyond the terrace fence, and a pale blue sky with slight clouds and pink tinting. Note: Patak Chand may well have come from Delhi, but his work can be attributed to Oudh on grounds of style. The dusky treatment of the hands and faces coupled with the subdued pigments of the costumes are not unlike the work of Mihr Chand. But the picture as a whole is clearly modelled on the Jammu style, and is possibly a copy of a particular Jammu original. W.G. Archer ((1973), I, 191) points out the historical implications of the presence in the picture of the leaders of the Bahu branch and the true Jammu branch of the Jammu family which were fused under Dhrub Dev c.1715, and the possible reflection upon their relative status. The costume of the courtiers is in the style of Jammu paintings of the early eighteenth century, but the treatment of the trees behind the terrace indicate a date closer to the middle of the century or later for a Jammu original. The circumstances under which a Pahari painting could have been brought to Oudh at this period remain obscure, and as yet no other example of an Oudh version of a Pahari painting is known. Another miniature signed by Patak Chand is in the Chester Beatty Library (42.4).

Held by
British Library: Asian and African Studies
Former department reference
J.1,18
Legal status
Not Public Record(s)
Language
Not applicable
Physical description
1 Item
Access conditions

Unrestricted. Appointment required to view these records. Please consult Asian and African Studies Print Room staff.

Physical condition
Medium: opaque watercolour.
Unpublished finding aids
Toby Falk and Mildred Archer, Indian miniatures in the India Office Library (London: Sotheby Parke Bernet, 1981), 260
Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/676cc06a-100c-4627-a6d5-f4dd39817324/

Catalogue hierarchy

963,091 records
1,308 records

Within the fonds: (British Library) Johnson Album

British Library, Visual Arts, Richard Johnson Collection

38 records

Within the file: Johnson 1

Total of 30 leaves separately mounted. Mostly male portraits with no obvious common...

You are currently looking at the item: Johnson 1,18

Raja Anand Dev of Bahu and Raja Dhrub Dev of Jammu. Artist(s): Patak Chand (fl. c.1770).