A Sikh wedding procession
Place of OriginPunjab state or Pakistan; Punjab province, India
Date1850 - 1900
CultureSikh
MaterialsOpaque watercolors on paper
DimensionsH. 12 1/2 × W. 21 1/2 in (H. 31.8 cm × W. 54.6 cm)
Credit LineGift of the Kapany Collection
Object number1998.70
DepartmentSouth Asian Art
ClassificationsPainting
On View
Not on viewUnlike the mythic wedding procession of the Hindu deity Shiva seen nearby, here we see a real-world wedding of a nineteenthcentury Sikh groom. The costumes and turban types make clear that this is a Sikh community event, but wedding processions of other groups in Punjab and Rajasthan are sometimes still similar today. The groom, in formal attire, rides a horse to the wedding site, which may be the bride’s home. Relatives and friends, both male and female, attend him, and there is festive music from instruments such as the oboe-like shehnai and a variety of drums—some, in this painting, carried by camels. Nearly lost in the crowd are two gesticulating female dancers. They, like the musicians, may be professional performers hired for the occasion. It is unclear whether what is shown is the wedding procession of a historical person who may one day be identified, or a generic scene.
Subject
- musician
- dancer
- camel
- wedding
approx. 1730-1750
approx. 1830
approx. 1670
approx. 1820-1830
approx. 1820
approx. 1850
approx. 1800-1900