|
Mihr `Ali [Mihr `Ali]
( fl c. 17951830). Persian painter. He produced at least ten full-size oil paintings of the Qajar monarch Fath `Ali Shah (reg 17971834). One of the earliest (17978; Calcutta, Victoria Mem. Hall), a portrait of him kneeling on a carpet, was probably sent as a present to the amirs of Sind in 1800. Two fine portraits (18034 and 18045) were painted for the Hall of the Marble Throne in the Gulistan Palace, Tehran, and a third, of the King enthroned (undated; Versailles, Château), was sent to Napoleon. These early portraits show Fath `Ali Shah with a squat neck and round face, but Mihr `Alis drawings improved in the first decade of the 19th century and later portraits show the King with more flattering proportions. These later paintings include portraits of the King standing (180910; St Petersburg, Hermitage), kneeling and holding a mace (181314; St Petersburg, Hermitage), and a third with the date obliterated (London, B. W. Robinson priv. col.). Mihr `Alis finest portrait, and perhaps the finest Persian oil painting in existence (181213; Tehran, Nigaristan Mus., ex-Amery col.; see ISLAMIC ART, fig. 243), is an impressive full-length portrait of the King wearing a magnificent robe of gold brocade and a huge crown and holding a jewelled staff of majesty surrounded by Solomons hoopoes.
|
|
There are more than 45,000 articles in The Grove Dictionary of Art.
To access the rest of this article, including the bibliography, subscribe to
www.groveart.com.
To find out more about this subject, click on a related article below and
subscribe to www.groveart.com
|