A Bidri Silver-Inlaid Bell-Shaped Huqqa Base with Mughal-Style Floral Bouquets, Bidar, Deccan, Central India, circa 1740s–1760s

Identification Number: 656
Available

Description

This refined huqqa or Hookah base, with a flaring bell-shaped body rising to a slightly concave waist and a short cylindrical neck with an everted rim, is crafted from a blackened zinc alloy and richly inlaid with silver sheets. Produced in the renowned Bidri workshops of Bidar—once a major artistic centre of the Deccan Sultanates—it likely dates to the middle decades of the 18th century. According to Mark Zebrowski, bell-shaped huqqa bases first appeared between 1730 and 1740, becoming progressively more desirable toward the latter half of the century (Zebrowski, Gold, Silver & Bronze from Mughal India, 1997, p. 236).

The vessel displays an elegant, architecturally harmonious silhouette. Its dense silver inlay is organised with almost sculptural precision and reflects the mid-18th-century Mughal courtly taste for stylised naturalism. The main decorative register on the body features exquisitely rendered upright bouquets composed of Mughal-style poppies, lotus blossoms, and hyacinths rising from long, fleshy leaves. The shoulders and base are adorned with overlapping friezes of drop-shaped motifs and lotus sprays, while the neck carries individually placed floral blossoms arranged with rhythmic, jewel-like regularity.

The artistic language of this huqqa base reflects the dynamic visual dialogue between the imperial Mughal aesthetic and older Deccani decorative traditions. Its striking contrast—bright silver floral motifs set against a deep, jet-black ground—embodies the essence of Bidri metalwork. Comparable visual solutions appear on a Hyderabadi bell-shaped huqqa base in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, attributed to the second half of the 18th century, and on another bell-shaped example in the Krishna Riboud Collection, published in Zebrowski, also, please see other related examples: (pp. 236–237, cat. nos. 395, 398 & 399). A closely related brass-inlaid, globular huqqa base in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (inv. 1984.221), dated to the late 17th century, demonstrates the continuity and evolution of this decorative vocabulary across regions and materials.

A masterful example of Deccani Bidri inlaid metalwork, this huqqa base stands as both an object of exceptional aesthetic refinement and as a document of the cosmopolitan tastes circulating between Mughal and Deccan courts during the early modern period.

Acknowledgment

The above text and literature were produced with the valued collaboration of Ms. B. C. (with thanks).

Dimensions

Height: 16 cm
Diameter of top:8 cm
Diameter of base:4 cm

Condition


Generally in very good condition. Due to the age and repeated use of the piece, it would naturally have undergone some specialised care and expert conservation. Minor superficial scratches and small losses to the silver inlay are present, particularly around the floral petals on the neck and along the decorative frieze at the base.

As is typical with the majority of old huqqa bases, the separately attached—or partially attached—underside section of the plain base is often partly damaged, cracked, or occasionally lost, perhaps due to the use of hot water inside the vessel or stress from movement. Specialists in the field consider such features indicators of originality. In this example, the underside base shows evidence of minimal historic repairs and conservation carried out at some point during the piece’s long life.

Nevertheless, the main structure of the huqqa base remains intact and stable.

Provence

The UK Art Market

References

Other Related References
Susan Strong, Bidri Ware: Inlaid Metalwork from India, Victoria & Albert Museum, London, 1985, ISBN 0 905209 63 X.
– For comparable floral and palmette decoration on an 18th-century Bidri salver (lot 19), illustrated on the back cover and pp. 19–20.

Jagdish Mittal, Bidri Ware and Damascene Work, Jagdish & Kamla Mittal Museum of Indian Art, Hyderabad, 2011, ISBN 978-81-904872-1-4.