This simple, thinly colored portrait glosses over some details as usual, like the pock marks on his face, but is possessed of a certain warmth, some closeness of feeling. The Maharaja appears much like Jacquemont described him - thin of body, nose sharp and slightly turned up, thin mouth, large eyes, long thin beard - and is, for a man with his means and his power, relatively simply dressed. The short sleeved cloak which he wears over his angarakha one does not see often in other portraits, nor does one see that narrow little strip of cloth which is draped round the neck and falls over the shoulder. Instead of a full turban, he wears here a head-covering which falls at the back of the neck and trails on to the shoulder. Many of these details give to this painting an air of immediacy that one often misses in more formal, conventionalized works. The sarpesh on the forehead, the projecting sword end, the jewel on the right arm, one does not of course miss. What is of interest again is the curiously shaped, simple seat: neither the throne which we know as belonging to him, nor the European style chair with arms, it looks like a wickerwork moorha, made comfortable to sit on with large cushions placed on it.
References:
Archer, W.G. Paintings of the Sikhs. London, 1966.
Goswamy, B.N. Piety and Splendor (Exhibition Catalogue). National Museum, New Delhi, 2000.
Stronge, Susan, ed. The Arts of the Sikh Kingdoms. London, 1999.
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