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Portrait of an African courtier, possibly Malik Ambar
Indian, Deccani
early 17th century
Object Place: Ahmednagar, Deccan, Southern India
Medium/Technique
Ink, color, silver and gold on paper
Dimensions
Height x width: 30.5 × 21.1 cm (12 × 8 5/16 in.)
Credit Line
Arthur Mason Knapp Fund
Accession Number26.8
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsAsia
ClassificationsPaintings
Malik ‘Ambar was a military general and prime minister of the Indian sultanate of Ahmadnagar in the early 17th century. However, he was not born into ranks of power: he was taken from his birthplace in present-day Ethiopia and brought across the Indian Ocean as an enslaved person. In this portrait, he is painted like other 17th-century elite men in India: face in profile, body turned slightly towards the viewer, weapon in hand and dressed in the finest clothes. But this portrait does not answer some important questions: what did it take for Malik ‘Ambar to become an elite member of a society that was not his own? What happened to the other enslaved people he came with from the Horn of Africa?
InscriptionsInscription, nearly illegible, may include name "Malik Ambar"
Provenance1926, sold by the Persian Art Center to the MFA for $225. (Accession Date: January 7, 1926)