,
National Museum, New Delhi,
Hyderabad, 1770–75|alt= Beside the usual portraits and illustrations to literary works, there are sometimes illustrated chronicles, such as the
Tuzuk-i-Asafiya. A Deccan speciality (also sometimes found in other media,
such as ivory) is the "composite animal" a large animal made up of many smaller images of other animals. A composite
Buraq and an elephant are illustrated here. Rulers are often given large haloes, following Mughal precedent. Servants fan their masters or mistresses with cloths, rather than the chowris or peacock-feather fans seen elsewhere, and swords usually have the straight Deccan form. Elephants were very popular in both the life and art of the Deccani courts, and artists revelled in depicting them behaving badly during the periodic
musth hormonal overloads affecting bull elephants. There was also a genre of drawings with some colour using
marbling effects in the bodies of horses and elephants. Apart from elephants, studies of animals or plants were less common in the Deccan than in Mughal painting, and when they occur they often have a less realistic style, with a "fanciful palette of intense colors". Unusually for India, there was a significant imported population of Africans in the Deccan, a few of whom rose to high positions as soldiers, ministers or courtiers.
Malik Ambar of Ahmadnagar and
Ikhlas Khan of Bijapur were the most famous of these; a number of portraits survive of both, as well as others of unidentified figures. One of the most important patrons of the style was Sultan
Ibrahim Adil Shah II of Bijapur (d. 1627), himself a very accomplished painter, as well as a musician and poet. He died the same year as
Jahangir, the last Mughal emperor to be an enthusiastic patron of painting other than imperial portraits. The portrait from c. 1590 illustrated above, which comes from the same period as
Akbar's artists at the Mughal court were developing the Mughal portrait style, shows a confident but very different style. The extreme close-up view was to remain most unusual in Indian portraiture, and it has been suggested it was directly influenced by European
prints, especially those of
Lucas Cranach the Elder, with which it shares a number of features. File:Anonymous - Radha and Krishna Embracing, Leaf from a Gita Govinda - 1962.241 - Cleveland Museum of Art.tiff|
Radha and Krishna Embracing, from a
Gita Govinda,
Aurangabad (?), c. 1650 File:Finch, Poppies, Dragonfly, and Bee India (Deccan, Golconda).jpg|Finch, Poppies, Dragonfly, and Bee, Deccan, c. 1650–1670, opaque watercolor and gold on paper,
Brooklyn Museum File:Portrait of Sultan Abu'l Hasan of Golconda, Standing (6124509941).jpg|
Abul Hasan Qutb Shah, the last Sultan of
Golconda, 1670s; he was then imprisoned for 13 years to his death in 1699. San Diego Museum of Art File:Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung I.jpg|
Aurangzeb's general at the
siege of Golconda,
Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung I,
Hyderabad, 1690. His son was the first
Nizam of Hyderabad. File:Muhammad Adil Shah II with courtiers and attendants.jpg|
Muhammad Adil Shah (d. 1656) with courtiers and attendants, painted over a century after his death ==Influence==