Tipu Sultan's Ambassadors to Paris


Portrait of Muhammad Dervish Khan, full-length, holding his sword in a landscape, ambassador to the French court sent by Tipu Sultan, France 1788.

The Indian ambassador along with the scholar Akbar Ali Khan and the elder Muhammed Osman Khan, were sent to France by Tipu Sultan, the powerful ruler of Mysore (1750-1799) who sought the support of Louis XVI in an effort to drive the British out of India.

Note - This imposing and potent portrait by Elisabeth-Louise Vigée Le Brun depicts Muhammad Dervish Khan, the Indian ambassador sent to France by the powerful Mysore ruler Tipu Sultan. Painted in the summer of 1788 and exhibited at the Salon of 1789, when political unrest had begun to boil in France, the work is an evocative account of France’s fascination with the East as well as Vigée’s resourcefulness in acquiring this unique commission. It is obvious that both Dervish Khan and Vigée would have found each other equally exotic and endlessly fascinating: one, a powerful Indian man parading around Paris in elegant muslin and gold-embroidered costumes, the other a woman artist who held such sway that she could get the King of France to request the sitting.

On July 16, 1788, almost a year to the day before the storming of the Bastille, three ambassadors from Mysore, India, arrived in Paris. Muhammed Dervish Khan, the lead ambassador and subject of the present portrait, along with the scholar Akbar Ali Khan and the elder Muhammed Osman Khan, were sent by Tipu Sultan, the powerful ruler of Mysore (1750-1799) who sought the support of Louis XVI in an effort to drive the British out of India.

The powerful Mysore ruler Tipu Sultan was one of the few Indian leaders who had successfully resisted British colonialism in the past. In the early 1780’s his stunning defeat of the British East India Company, which had gradually transformed from commercial trading organization to a widespread government venture, had resulted in the capture of over 7,000 British men held in his island fortress of Seringapatam. The French had supported Tipu in that military campaign, but after the American Revolution the country had signed a peace treaty with England and retreated from India. Eager to re-engage the French both militarily and commercially, in 1786 he began planning the delegation to France, in which he would ask for the support of Louis XVI and the French army and woo them with commercial goods to bring French artisans back to the Mysore Court. Little did he know that at the same time Louis XVI’s power was beginning to deteriorate, and the King’s taste for extravagant foreign goods over those made at home was stirring up tensions in the country.

The three ambassadors led a grand and impressive embassy, causing a sensation in Paris as they made their way to Versailles. Most Parisians had never seen a person from India, much less Mysore, and local newspapers like the Journal de Paris reported on the ambassadors’ whereabouts almost daily. They attended plays and operas, toured French silk and wallpaper factories, and did not shy away from dalliances with local women. Indeed, their French interpreter Pierre Ruffin (1722-1824) recalled that they did not want to leave Paris to go to Versailles, claiming it was because they hadn’t yet procured enough porcelain and glassware for the sultan, when in reality it seemed they were too enamored with romantic liaisons to want to leave the city. They did finally make their way to Versailles, stopping en route at the Sèvres porcelain factory near Saint-Cloud. A gouache by Charles-Eloi Asselin, a porcelain painter at the factory, shows the three ambassadors and their entourage causing a stir as they encountered the locals in Saint-Cloud on the 8th of August, 1788.

In 1788, Vigée Le Brun’s fame and influence was flourishing; she had been painting Marie-Antoinette for a decade and was well-ensconced in the powerful elite of Paris and Versailles. When the artist saw the ambassadors at the Opera, she knew she had to paint them:

“I saw these Indians at the opera and they appeared to me so remarkably picturesque that I thought I should like to paint them. But as they communicated to their interpreter that they would never allow themselves to be painted unless the request came from the King, I managed to secure that favour from His Majesty.”

Vigée’s life-size portrait of Dervish Khan is an extraordinary reflection on a French woman’s perception of a powerful Indian man, painted with exceptional skill and delicacy. Dervish Khan is imposing and formidable, clutching and displaying his curved sword with its detailed engraving, showing off his power both physically and culturally. There is an initial element of fierceness in the portrait, but the elegance and grandeur of the costume overcomes that, as the light so delicately falls on the bright, gauzy fabrics of his gown and reflects off the golden embroidery of his detailed sash and floral overcoat. He wears the traditional costume that so enamored the French men and particularly women who encountered his embassy, so fascinated by the Indian fabrics which were making their way into French fashions. Indeed this sheer, layered white muslin recalls the dress scandalously worn by Marie-Antoinette in a portrait painted by Vigée a few years prior.

As Muslim men, the idea of having themselves represented pictorially, let alone by a female artist, was unheard of. Vigée tenacity and resourcefulness in achieving the sitting was a remarkable feat. After the request came from the King, they agreed to sit for her at their hôtel in Paris. Her detailed description of the encounter in her memoirs provides a fascinating look into this awkward clash of cultures. She is thrown by their sprinkling of rosewater on her hands upon her entering, and later at dinner is shocked when she finds the dining room set for them to sit down on the floor. She painted Dervish Khan first, “standing, with his hand on his dagger. He threw himself into such an easy, natural position of his own accord that I did not make him change it.”

When the paintings had finished drying, Vigée sent for the works but was refused; Dervish Khan had hidden his portrait behind the bed. As Vigée enthusiastically recalls, she strategically convinced his servant to steal it back for her, only to later hear that Dervish Khan had then planned to murder the servant for this transgression. Luckily, an interpreter convinced the ambassador that murdering your valet was not acceptable practice in France, and he falsely claimed that it was the King who wanted the portrait.

The intensity in which Dervish Khan is portrayed is unlike any other portrait by Vigée, whose oeuvre tends more towards a sympathetic portrayal of handsome and elegant royal courtiers. The work recalls the grand portrait of the Polynesian Omai, painted by British artist Joshua Reynolds in 1776, in which the foreigner is grandly and powerfully depicted in his robes, standing in a landscape.

The painting, along with that of Dervish Khan’s fellow ambassador Osman Khan, was exhibited at the Salon of 1789, which opened in August despite the disquieting political climate. Both pictures were displayed prominently, as shown in a drawing of the exhibition by Charles de Wailly.

In the end, Dervish Khan and the embassy did not achieve their goal of a treaty with France; Louis XVI agreed only to reopen a commercial alliance, not a military one. When the three ambassadors returned to Mysore that fall, Tipu Sultan had their heads cut off due to their failure. While Tipu continued his efforts against the British for another decade, in 1799 he was finally defeated and killed. His death can be seen as a turning point in Europe’s relationship with India; while a mutual exoticism and fascination was nurtured for the centuries leading up to this point, by 1799 the divide of “East” and “West” had shifted into an attitude of superiority by the Europeans as they continued to expand and colonize.

Vigée’s haunting portrait of Dervish Khan is compelling for many reasons, particularly as it captures this very unique moment in history. On the eve of Revolution, a female artist in France gloriously captures a striking foreigner, a Muslim ambassador from India, as he encounters the exotic world of Paris: in hindsight, the portrait is even more powerful than the sitter himself had hoped to be portrayed.

Artist - Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, also known as Madame Le Brun, was a prominent French portrait painter of the late 18th century.

Vigée Le Brun (Paris 1755 - 1842), Portrait of Muhammad Dervish Khan, full-length, holding his sword in a landscape, signed and dated lower right: L. Vigée Le Brun / 1788, oil on canvas, 88 3/4 by 55 1/2 in.; 225.5 by 136 cm. Estimate $4,000,000 - $6,000,000.

© Sotheby's / Wikipedia / Alain.R.Truong 
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3.18 One of Tipu Sultan's Ambassadors to Paris  



©D�partement des Sculptures,
Mus�e du Louvre, Paris
One of Tipu Sultan's Ambassadors to Paris, possibly Mohammed Osman Khan; 1788

Terracotta
65 x 40 x 25cm

CLAUDE ANDRE DESEINE (1740-1823)


he exotic appearance of Tipu's ambassadors attracted much interest in Paris in the summer of 1788. They were conspicuous in the audience at the Opéra, and large crowds accompanied them when they visited the Parc de St. Cloud. Deseine's bust is a more penetrating and powerful portrait of an Oriental. The sitter is possibly Mohammed Osman Khan, whose nephew also travelled with the ambassadors to Paris. The tentative identification of this bust, and of a companion portrait of a young man, is based on their similarity with a series of five small gouache portraits of Tipu's three ambassadors, the nephew of Mohammed Osman Khan and the son of Akbar Ali Khan. The original portraits were destroyed by fire in June 1940, but photographs of them survive in the Mus�e Historique de l'Orl�anais. The ambassadors had arrived at Orleans on 11 October 1788, en route for Brest and the ship Thetis, which would convey them back to India.

A full-length oil portrait survives of a second ambassador, Mohammed Dervich Khan, painted by one of the most fashionable artists of the time, Mme Vig�e Lebrun. Initially, the ambassador did not wish to sit for his portrait, and only the personal intervention of Louis XVI succeeded in overcoming the Muslim ambassador's sensibilities on this matter. Lebrun's portrait, emphasising Mohammed Dervich Khan's stature and the rich fabrics of his sash and jacket, was exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1789. Deseine's portrait, completed a year earlier, makes little concession to the popular romantic interest in exoticism. His carefully observed portrait follows in the tradition of Jean-Baptiste Pigalle's splendid portrait (c.1760) of the Negro, Paul, and is one of the rare French 18 century sculptural portraits of 'Foreigners' or 'Exotics.'




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