Indian Company School Group of 10 Figures: Trades & Occupations

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A set of original c.1810 gouache paintings – Indian Company School, Group of 10 Figures: Trades & Occupations.

An exceptionally fine set of 10 Indian Company School figure paintings, probably executed in Madras at the turn of the 19th century. Each is exquisitely painted in opaque pigment on cream wove paper, with contemporary inscription under.

Subjects comprise:

Butler;
Moorman Tailor;
Dhobi [Washerman];
Pundarum / Beggar;
Dubash [Translator];
Oil Monger and His Wife;
Beetle Seller Moorman;
Conicopoly / Accountant [in the Madras Presidency];
Duffadar [Officer in the British Indian Army];
Chuckler [Cobbler] and His Wife.

Depictions of local trades were common Company School subjects, capturing 'exotic' and unfamiliar figures from everyday life in India for Western collectors. Today they offer an important ethnographic record of prevailing caste hierarchies of the time, and the Orientalist lens through which Indian life was encountered and represented. Two of the subjects, the Chuckler (Cobbler) and the Oil Monger, are depicted with their attendant wife, handing them a tool of their trade.

This suite of ten paintings are a particularly fine example of Kampani Kalam (Company style painting), with exceptional sensitivity to the faces and keenly observed, minutely rendered detail to the particularities of clothing. Each figure is anchored on a patch of more loosely painted ground, which provides an effective naturalistic counterpoint.

Each on a trimmed sheet, largest: 22.5 x 17.8cm; smallest: 19.8 x 12.2cm.

+ Read the S&W Collection Research

Indian Company Paintings

'Company School' refers to a variety of hybrid styles that came about through the influence of Western (especially British) patrons on Indian artists in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Finding traditional, stylised Indian painting not to their taste, these patrons began to collect works that, while incorporating traditional elements from Rajput and Mughal painting were given a more 'western' appearance through their use of perspective and rounded modelling, as opposed to the more decorative, 'flatter' styles that had gone before.

The Company style evolved to meet this demand: as many of their collectors worked for the East India Company, these paintings became associated with the name. Leading centres of the Company style were the main British settlements of Calcutta, Madras (Chennai), Delhi, Lucknow and Patna.

Europeans commissioned sets of images depicting festivals and scenes from Indian life, with people of different castes or trades being particular favourite subjects, as well as dancers and musicians. Collectors were particularly attracted to what were perceived to be the exotic customs, costumes and architecture of their adopted—and in many cases temporary—homeland. Paintings were mostly on paper, and most were small, reflecting the Indian miniature tradition and the intention that they would be kept in portfolios or albums.

Sadly there is little information about the identity of the numerous and flourishing ‘Company School’ artists; indeed Company School (or Kampani kalam) has been criticised as a term for defining a diverse body of works by the identity of its patrons rather than the talented Indian artists by which they are painted. These paintings resonate with fascinating and important questions and contradictions of cultural exchange.

+ Artwork Details

Dimensions: Height: 21.5cm (8.46") Width: 12cm (4.72")

Presented: Unframed.

Medium: Gouache

Age: Early 19th-century

Signed: No.

Inscribed: Inscribed below.

Dated: --

Condition: Overall in excellent condition, with strong colours and crisp paint. Minor, small foxing marks to the paper in places. Faint indentation lines to some sheet corners due to historical corner mounting. At the ear of the 'Chuckler' figure there is a small area of paint flaking. Please see photos for detail.

Stock number: KD-478