Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Nawab Sadat Ali Khan Holding a Durbar

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Mussowar Khan (attr. artist)
Watercolor on paper, 1799
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Lucknow today holds few treasures from its rich premodern past. Upon recapturing the city, British soldiers freely looted the royal palace. Official prize agents seized anything left of value for auction, distributing proceeds to victorious officers and soldiers. Large oil paintings that had previously hung in the Coronation Hall numbered among the spoils. Lieutenant Colonel Gould Hunter-Weston (1823–1904) had four of them copied by Lucknow court painter Mussowar Khan, who skillfully reduced them to watercolors of a more manageable size to send home. This watercolor is one of two editions; the second resides at Hunterston House in Ayrshire, Scotland. Both copied a now-lost earlier painting in which Nawab Sadat Ali Khan (r. 1798–1814) sits with his son on a takht (throne) during a durbar (reception). High-ranking Indian and European officials in late eighteenth-century Lucknow surround him, including British Resident Colonel William Scott (d. 1804), seated left of the nawab, and the chief minister, Tafuzzai Hussein Khan (1727–1800), seated right, next to the nawab.