
Tracing 500 Years of Mughal Grandeur
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts,Richmond,United States
India’s Great Mughals: Art, Power and Opulence invites visitors into the richly layered world of the Mughal court (1526-1857), where art, diplomacy and imperial ambition intersected across centuries of cultural exchange. Organized by the Victoria and Albert Museum and presented at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA), the exhibition brings together nearly 200 works exploring the artistic achievements and global reach of the Mughal Empire under rulers Akbar, Jahangir and Shah Jahan.
Jewel-encrusted objects, imperial portraits, manuscripts, textiles and architectural designs reveal how Mughal rulers “consciously constructed a visual language of power that could be deployed—at every scale and in every medium—to communicate their sophistication, ambitions and authority,” notes VMFA’s coordinating curator John Henry Rice. While the exhibition embraces Mughal splendor, it reframes opulence as deeply strategic. “The sometimes mind-boggling sumptuousness of Mughal artistic productions,” Rice explains, “was not simply an end in itself.”
The exhibition also highlights the empire’s cosmopolitanism and global exchange. Paintings influenced by European Christian prints, Chinese porcelain and Colombian emeralds trace the court’s international connections. Diplomatic gifts—including a North American turkey and an African zebra rendered by Jahangir’s artists—underscore the Mughals’ engagement with the wider world. “The Mughal court was not just a site of power and opulence,” Rice says, “but a place of scientific inquiry, rational thought, imagination and learning.”

Mughal Court Workshops, Thumb Ring, ca. 1615-20 Gold, rubies, emeralds, enamel.
COURTESY OF VMFA
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