Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan were the three most eminent emperors of the
brilliant Mughal dynasty. These three successive reigns corresponded to the
golden age of Mughal art. Views of the magnificent reign of Jahangir and
images of imperial splendor were skillfully painted on paper.
This ambiguous and brilliantly executed miniature is among the most original
products of imperial Mughal painting. A number of complicated iconographic
formulae are vividly presented by the artist in this remarkable picture. In
his attempt to portray an imaginary meeting of the two emperors visualized
in a dream, the artist depicts it as an unearthly, supernatural event. The
scene is set against an immense halo composed of the resplendent sun and a
fantastic crescent moon in the bluish green sky. Jahangir, the holder of the
whole world proudly stands on a huge globe and embraces the bending figure
of Abbas Shah (king of Persia). The figure of Jahangir is bigger in size
than the Shah and the attitude of the Mughal emperor is that of a great
monarch generously patronizing an inferior rival. Jahangir is the larger and
infinitely the more self-confident monarch, firmly embracing Shah whose arms
cannot fit around the more robust figure of his royal brother and who is
almost made to stoop in a deferential attitude. This highly partial
assessment of their relative strength is symbolized in the animals on which
they stand. Jahangir stands on a sturdy lion, the king of beasts sprawled
across India and Persia, whereas the Shah is made to stand on a meek lamb
pushed over into the Mediterranean. The globe on which they stand
symbolically illustrates the whole world which they have divided between
themselves, with, of course, the lion's share going to the Mughal. The
terrestrial globe which is very close to European examples of the period,
shows with some cartographical accuracy, the regions of the world. A pair of
winged cherubs taken from European paintings complete the painting.
This description by Renu Rana.