Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

H. M. Musserodeen Hyder, King of Oude (Nasir al-Din Haidar, Nawab of Awadh)

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Unknown company artist, Awadh
Watercolor on paper, 1827
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Collection


Among the regional power players who sought to gain leverage from a splintering Mughal Empire were the rulers (nawab) of Awadh (northern India). This portrait of Nasir al-Din Haidar (r. 1837–47), the Nawab of Awadh, captures the delicate balance of forces that these rulers navigated between the Mughals, their local competitors, alongside British and French forces. His full-length portrait somewhat adopts the appearance of a European ruler, though his head dons a Persianate crown framed by a red nimbus recognizable to local potentates in South Asia. His court dress and garter cloak evoke another visual language of power in close conversation with European states as he leans against a rococo desk set before a velvet drape and fluted marble column. The crown and imperial regalia worn at his coronation were designed in this hybrid style by English artist Robert Home (1752–1834). However, the greenery past the low marble fence recalls courtly terraces frequently found in earlier paintings from Lucknow and surrounding workshops.