Thanks, Amber. That is something really new. Can you give me citations for 
these 
for sources of the two Mughal butterflies, including page number? These 
drawings 
being old are sure to be in public domain.

For more about butterflies in culture, albeit from another continent, please 
see 
:

http://thebutterflydiaries.wordpress.com/2010/06/06/meso-american-butterfly-patterns/

 
Warm regards,

Ashwin Baindur





________________________________
From: Amber Habib <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, 3 January, 2011 22:09:35
Subject: Re: [ButterflyIndia] The Study of Butterflies - by Peter Smetacek 
(resources for newbies)

  
Hi,

Thanks for the link!

I was particularly intrigued by a comment on the paucity of butterflies in 
Mughal art. There are certainly many paintings on mammals, birds and flowers - 
the ones by the artist Mansur (Jahangir's court) are generally the most 
appreciated for the accuracy of depiction of various species that caught 
Jahangir's eye or were presented to him. So I went through a couple of volumes 
depicting Mughal art and while butterflies were indeed scarce they were not 
completely absent. I am attaching rather crude photos of details of the two 
that 
I found.

Both are from about 1620 (Jahangir's reign was 1605-27). I can't identify the 
one by Mansur though it has a rather danaid-ish look. But the one by "Muhammad 
Nadir of Samarqand" is a really wonderfully painted Plain Tiger that  could 
grace any modern field guide.

Amber Habib
Delhi




________________________________
From: Ashwin Baindur <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, January 3, 2011 12:59:57 PM
Subject: [ButterflyIndia] The Study of Butterflies - by Peter Smetacek 
(resources for newbies)

  
Hi,

Peter Smetacek wrote a series of articles on butterflies for the common man. 
They are great reading especially for newbies and of general interest to all.

Best of all, they are open access. You can access the download links and a 
small 
writeup here :

http://thebutterflydiaries.wordpress.com/2011/01/03/the-study-of-butterflies/
 
Warm regards,

Ashwin Baindur




 


      

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