August 30, 2008–March 15, 2009
This exhibition focuses on the artistic transitions that took place in Indo-Muslim cultural centers in the 18th and 19th centuries. It explores the continuities and creative transformations in Indian paintings between 1739, the year Delhi was attacked by Nader Shah from Iran, and 1858, the year India became a British colony.
During this period of decentralization, India was only nominally ruled by the Mughal emperor. Political, military, and economic power shifted to groups of newly emerging elites: independent regional rulers, merchants and bankers, and the British East India Company.
Indian artists of this time adjusted to new patronage systems and social conditions and strategically combined Mughal visual formulas with elements adapted from increasingly familiar European artistic conventions.
The works on view—many for the first time—are drawn from SDMA’s extensive Edwin Binney 3rd Collection of Indian paintings, and the exhibition presents new research and identifications.