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During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Indian artists were commonly employed by the British East India Company and its servants to illustrate the manners and customs of India and to record its many picturesque sights, monuments, deities, festivals, crafts and occupations. Their work, a blend of Indian and British styles, is known as 'Company painting' and is represented in the Victoria and Albert Museum by over 2,600 examples. In this catalogue, Dr Mildred.
Archer discusses the circumstances in which this type of painting evolved and describes and lists the Museum's collection according to the various regions in which it was produced: Andhra, Trichinopoly, Madras, Madura, Tanjore, Malabar and Coorg, Mysore, Murshidabad, Patna, Calcutta, Benares, Puri, Oudh, Delhi and Agra, the Punjab, Rajasthan, Western India, Nepal, Burma, Sri Lanka and Malacca. Many little-known styles of Company painting are described and illustrated,
Includes painting on mica, glass and ivory, and each section is prefaced by a historical note. The volume is richly illustrated and accompanied by an extensive bibliography, glossary and index.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Places
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1
Company Paintings: Indian Paintings of the British Period (Indian Art Series)
January 1993, Museum
Hardcover
in English
0944142303 9780944142301
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2
Tie-dyed textiles of India: tradition and trade
1991, Rizzoli, In association with the Victoria and Albert Museum and Grantha Corp., Middletown, N.J., Rizzoli International Publications, Incorporated
in English
084781162X 9780847811625
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3
Tie-dyed textiles of India: tradition and trade
1991, Victoria and Albert Museum in association with Mapin Pub. Pvt.
in English
0944142303 9780944142301
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 201-203) and index.

