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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Asian And Middle Eastern Art > Mughal art and architecture
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Mughal art and architecture, Asian And Middle Eastern Art

Related Category: Asian And Middle Eastern Art

In architecture the first great Mughal monument was the mausoleum to Humayun, erected during the reign of Akbar (1556–1605). The tomb, which was built in the 1560s, was designed by a Persian architect Mirak Mirza Ghiyas. Set in a garden at Delhi, it has an intricate ground plan with central octagonal chambers, joined by an archway with an elegant facade and surmounted by cupolas, kiosks, and pinnacles. At the same time Akbar was building his fortress-palace in his capital, Agra. Native red sandstone was inlaid with white marble, and all the surfaces were ornately carved on the outside and sumptuously painted inside.

Akbar went on to build the entire city of Fatehpur Sikri (City of Victory) in which extensive use was made of the low arches and bulbous domes that characterize the Mughal style. Built in 1571 the choice of the site of Sikri reflected Akbar's gratitude to a Muslim saint at Sikri for the birth of his son. Courtiers soon followed suit and built homes surrounding the palace and mosque. The new city became the capital of the empire, but in 1585 it was abandoned.

Under Akbar, Persian artists directed an academy of local painters. The drawings, costumes, and ornamentation of illuminated manuscripts by the end of the 16th cent. illustrate the influence of Indian tastes and manners in the bright coloring and detailed landscape backgrounds. Modeling and perspective also began to be adapted from Western pictures. Basawan, Lal, and Daswanth were Akbar's most famous painters.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Akbar
Aurangzeb
Chittagong
Delhi Sultanate
Fatehpur Sikri
Humayun
illumination, in art
India
Indian art and architecture
Islamic art and architecture
Jahangir
Lahore
mosque
Mughal
Persian art and architecture
Qutb Minar
Shah Jahan
Taj Mahal

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Literature and the Arts > Art and Architecture
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