Contents:
Preface
Introduction
Part I Studying Mughal Painting: Critical Issues and State of Affairs: Epistemological preliminaries; Historiographical and conceptual framework of Mughal pictorial hybridity.
Part II The Mughal Pictorial Becoming: From the Beginning of the Empire (1526) to the End of Shah Jahan’s Reign (1658): Genesis of aesthetic hybridity in Mughal painting; Hyperdialectics in the Akbari pictorial synthesis; Suite et Fin: from unbridled hybridization to non-hybridness.
Conclusion; References; Index.
Biography
Valerie Gonzalez is an expert on Islamic art history and aesthetics. She teaches Islamic studies at the Leighton House Museum, London. She was previously a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University, USA.
'Equipped with an understanding of aesthetics as the analysis of the sensory and affective encounter and a deep respect for artistic creativity, Gonzalez is able to argue for a new understanding of Mughal painting’s aesthetic syntheses of Indic, Persian, Islamic, and European pictorial traditions. Her phenomenological method permits an acute account of how a work of art makes a world through practices of spatiality, textuality, and figurality. Her historical analysis compellingly explains the transformations of these practices during the Mughal empire.' Laura U. Marks, Simon Fraser University, Canada






