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National Museum, Delhi Daily Life In A Village 1750 ADDetails Unknown ()

(taille reelle)
It is an uncommon subject depicting scenes from daily life in a typical Indian village, like cooking, milking, churning, grinding, winnowing and cleaning the houses. One can see an old lady is busy with spinning wheel while two young ladies are shown with water vessels. Artist has depicted even the minute details of decorating the floor with alpana. There is an unusual scene painted in the foreground of the painting. A mahout with his elephant is shown entering in the village and suddenly enraged and attacked villagers, captured one of them and crushed him under his trunk. The mahout is trying his best to control the uncontrolled elephant but failed. The frighten villagers are running here and there.
This is a dated painting of the period of Maharana Jagat Singh II of Mewar 1735-51 and the picturization is nothing short of a bird eye view of a dawn of a Mewar village. Maharana also gave patronage to artists like his father Maharana Sangram Singh (1711- 1735).