Page from Tales of a Parrot (Tuti-nama): Fourth night: The two erring cooks, dressed as maidservants, fall at the prince’s feet and beg forgiveness, c. 1560. Seated on a fine stool in the center, the king is astonished to receive his two handsome cooks, whom he had sent to seduce his soldier’s faithful wife. After she trapped them and kept them prisoner for weeks until the arrival of the king, she shaved their heads and forced them to dress as female servants to shame them for testing her fidelity. Some folios in this manuscript were altered from their original compositions, cr


Page from Tales of a Parrot (Tuti-nama): Fourth night: The two erring cooks, dressed as maidservants, fall at the prince’s feet and beg forgiveness, c. 1560. Seated on a fine stool in the center, the king is astonished to receive his two handsome cooks, whom he had sent to seduce his soldier’s faithful wife. After she trapped them and kept them prisoner for weeks until the arrival of the king, she shaved their heads and forced them to dress as female servants to shame them for testing her fidelity. Some folios in this manuscript were altered from their original compositions, creating discolouration in many areas. The yellow background was changed to lavender, the legs of the stool were shortened, and the king’s bolster lowered. The manuscript’s patron, the Mughal emperor Akbar, brought artists from many regions of India to work in his court, and some of their compositions and colour choices were updated, apparently after they learned of Akbar’s stylistic preferences. This important manuscript, which is almost entirely in the Cleveland Museum of Art’s collection, is critical for understanding the early development of Mughal painting.


Size: 3396px × 5177px
Photo credit: © Heritage Art/Heritage Images / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: 1556-1605, akbar, art, cleveland, gold, gum, heritage, india, ink, mughal, museum, painting, paper, reign, tempera, unknown