Posted on: 18 September 2010

Asif ud-Daulah, by John Zoffany, c.1785-90

"A PORTRAIT OF THE NAWAB OF OUDH, ASAF-UD-DAULA, LUCKNOW, INDIA, CIRCA 1785-90; watercolour and gouache on card, with a seated figure in relaxed pose, dressed in white with a jewelled turban, necklaces and bazubands, his waist band supporting a fine rock crystal hilted dagger, unframed.

The SOTHEBYS CATALOGUE NOTE: Inscriptions: in ink on the reverse in Urdu: 'the likeness of Asaf Ud-Daula'
This painting is after a portrait of Asaf-ud-Daula by the renowned German artist Johann Zoffany (1733-1810), completed in 1784 and now in the India Office Library (Archer 1979, no.89, p.147). Both paintings exhibit similar details, such as the striped green and cream cushions, the lowering background and various features of Asaf-ud-Daula's jewellery and costume.

Zoffany trained in Germany and Rome, later making his way to Britain where he began a stellar career as a humble drapery painter, rising to Royal patronage and in 1769 his career in Britain was capped by a personal recommendation from King George to be a founding member of the Royal Academy. Falling out of favour with the Queen, and lured by the financial promise of India, Zoffany relocated in 1783, spent his first month in Madras, moved to Calcutta and from thence, following in Tilly Kettle's footsteps, travelled to Lucknow and the court of the Nawab of Oudh, Asaf-ud-Daula.
A jolly character, if an apparently ineffectual potentate, Asaf-ud-Daula was described in a letter from Lewis Ferdinand Smith as "mild in manners, generous to extravagance, and engaging in his conduct; but he has no great mental powers though his heart is good...he is fond of lavishing his treasures on gardens, palaces, horses, elephants, and above all, on... all sorts of European manufactures... [including the] elegant paintings of a Lorraine or a Zophani (sic)... all he looks to is that there be money sufficient for his private expenses." (Archer 1979, p.144-145). Despite this contemporary description of the Nawab as a bungling glutton, ghazals praising his generosity to the people, especially during the famine of 1783-84, were still being recited during the nineteenth-century (Bayly 1990, p.82, no.78).

After Tilly Kettle's stint in Oudh from 1771 to 1773, it became the fashion for local artists to copy European portraits. Indeed Zoffany's paintings were widely imitated even whilst he practised, as indicated in the list of effects belonging to a European in 1801 that included "seven from pictures by Zoffany" (Archer 1979,p.143). The present portrait is a tribute, both to Zoffany's fame and his expertise."

Source : Columbia University


 View Post on Facebook

Comments from Facebook

Zoffany is incredible :)

<3

In the manner of a 3D miniature after Reynolds.

Oh, I downloaded a book about Zoffany from archive.org just the other day. :))

If you are interested in Zoffany, I can thoroughly recommend Penelope Treadwell recent book, Johan Zoffany, Artist and Adventuer published in London by Paul Holberton in 2009. I found my copy in the National Gallery, and just could not resist buying it. It is very good on his career in India, and his relationship with many of the other artists and officials on Oudh and Bengal. I have been interested in Zoffany's work for many years, and I thought that I was aware of most of his work, but Treadwell has found some very interesting ones in private collections. There is a great picture of the Dashwood and Auriol family and another of Henry Vansittart and his family. Nick Balmer

Nick : Penelope Treadwell's book is available in India and I too bought it recently. It is definitely an exhaustive and a fairly dense book to read....at times. My interest naturally was the India part and was fascinated at the variety of his paintings...and the one that clearly stands out is the 'Auriol and Dashwood families' as you have mentioned. The other favorite of mine is 'Prince Jawan Bakht (Mirza Jahander Shah)....he almost speaks to you !

painting from imambada??????????????

The Nawabs of Oudh were great patrons of the arts-dance-music--buildings-and women--in school I had no less than 10 royal descendants--each one claiming to be the "real M'Coy" The place to see is Kaiserbagh--with its long walls where horseback riding was done--and several 4-5 angled posts for "kabutar baazi'--the famous"Lakka Kabutar " still survives among the "Kabutar Baaz " in Lucknow. Tilly Kettles painted some very captivating family portraits of Nawab Shuja-ud-Daula--one which is shown in Mildred Archer's "Company Paintings' c 1815. In this work Shuja-ud -daula is shown with his 10 sons--Asaf-ud-Daula being the eldest and heir-apparent--now in hindsight all those 10 "chote nawabs "in school were correct in claiming their escutcheon---in Tartar dress ???-- One of the finest collections of the Oudh style is the Gentil Album--58 pages of drawings bound into a worn leather cover