Princess and attendant in trompe l’oeil window
Creator Name
Cultural Context
Date
Source
About the Work
Cleveland Museum of Art Object Description
A golden window shade has been rolled up to reveal a princess seated on a terrace. The carpet draped over the sill echoes that of the balcony rail where royals would show themselves to the public. Rather than taking the view of an outsider, the viewer looks from inside the palace out to the women and the wooded landscape beyond.
During the mid-1600s, the Mughal court introduced a preference for the patterns on carpets and textiles: flowering plants on a plain ground. This influential fashion derived from their appreciation of European botanical studies that merchants and diplomats brought to India.
During the mid-1600s, the Mughal court introduced a preference for the patterns on carpets and textiles: flowering plants on a plain ground. This influential fashion derived from their appreciation of European botanical studies that merchants and diplomats brought to India.
Work details
"--" = no data available
Title
Creator
Worktype
Cultural Context
Material
Dimensions
Technique
--
Language
--
Date
Provenance
Style Period
--
Rights
Inscription
Location
--
Source
Subjects
--
Topic
--
Related Content
--
All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:
Aqil Khan (Indian, active mid-1700s), Princess and attendant in trompe l’oeil window, c. 1765, Cleveland Museum of Art. CC0.
Help us improve this content!
Let our archivists know if you have something to add.
Save this work.
Start an account to add this work to your personal curated collection.
