Company School 19th-century Indian Gouache Mica Painting – Elephant Howdah

Somerset & Wood
SOLD
Stock Number:
JX-390
Company School 19th-century Indian Gouache Mica Painting – Elephant Howdah

An original 19th-century gouache painting, Indian Company School, Elephant with Double-canopied Howdah.

A superb Indian gouache painting on transparent mica depicting an ornately canopied elephant howdah. The colour and detail in this painting are exceptional. In the 19th century a howdah was a symbol of wealth for its owner; they would often be elaborately decorated, even with expensive gemstones. Howdahs were used to carry wealthy people during processions, hunting or in warfare.

This is one of a small series of mica paintings of Indian trades, professions and palanquin carriages that we have for sale (see JX-382 to JX-390). The series is painted with particular precision, with fine detail to the costumes.

Indian Company paintings on mica are rare; it is estimated that as of now, there are only around 7,000 mica paintings available in the world.

The mica is loose with no mount or backing.

All artworks come with a Certificate of Authenticity and—if it is a collection artwork—its accompanying collection text or artist biography.


Details

Signed: No.

Inscribed: Inscription scratched into the mica below the painting: 'Elephant Howdah (covered)'.

Height: 13.1cm (5.2″) Width: 9.7cm (3.8″)

Condition: In good condition for its age. The paint is well intact and exceptionally vivid. There is a small loss to the lower left coner of the mica and slight cracking to the lower edge. Note that other marks visible in the photo are not cracks but rather areas of slight delamination. Please see photos for detail.

Presented: Unframed.


Indian Mica Paintings

This painting is one of a large number of 19th-century works on mica that we have for sale, originating from India. Mica paintings featured a wide range of subject matter, including Hindu gods and goddesses, religious events, trades people and flora and fauna of the subcontinent. They were very popular around the middle of the 19th century, being produced in large numbers for the colonial tourist market: they imitated paintings on glass, which were popular in Europe at the time.

Mica paintings are generally small, and painted in gouache on one side of very thin, flexible sheets. Mica is a transparent mineral which is found throughout south India. The mica is formed between strata of granite, and the transparency of the material is a result of the heat and pressure created between layers of rock. Mica consists of many interlocking platelets, resulting in a laminar structure which can be split easily into thin sheets.The appeal of mica as a support for painting is due to its very smooth surface: the paint sits on it without sinking in, making the colours very intense. Mica is a very brittle substance, however, meaning that it is relatively rare to find examples in perfect condition.

The Victoria and Albert Museum, London houses a collection of around 700 paintings on mica. There are further collections at the Wellcome Trust and Cambridge University Library.

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