Farrukh Beg, a Kalmyk of Central Asia, …

Years: 1611 - 1611

Farrukh Beg, a Kalmyk of Central Asia, had first worked at Kabul under Mirza Hakim, the half brother of the Mughal emperor Akbar.

After Hakim died Farrukh Beg had joined Akbar's service in about 1585.

His earliest paintings are strongly Persian in character, and he continues to be a conservative painter, not modifying his style to any considerable extent in the new environment.

Several features of his later paintings—the large plants, color scheme, and treatment of drapery—have suggested that he might have spent some years in the Deccan.

An outstanding painter, he is praised by the Indian Mughal emperor Jahangir as “unrivaled in the age.”

Farrukh Beg: A Drunken Babur Returns to Camp at Night, Lahore, Pakistan, (1589) Opaque watercolor, ink, and gold on paper, mounted within borders of a Rawdat al-safa page, 41.0 cm (height) by 26.3 cm (width), Lahore, Pakistan

Farrukh Beg: A Drunken Babur Returns to Camp at Night, Lahore, Pakistan, (1589) Opaque watercolor, ink, and gold on paper, mounted within borders of a Rawdat al-safa page, 41.0 cm (height) by 26.3 cm (width), Lahore, Pakistan

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