Lot 28
 
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TRAIN ENGINE    

ATTRIBUTABLE TO BANI LAL, PATNA, CIRCA 1880
Watercolour on paper pasted on paper
Image: 9.5 x 12.25 in (24 x 31 cm)

NON-EXPORTABLE REGISTERED ANTIQUITY

PROVENANCE
The artist's family
Thence by descent




Bani Lal's mastery over perspective and shading, and his capacity for precise documentation is evident in this painting of a locomotive pulling into a station. The artist's eye for detail is seen in every element: the smoky soot, the dull sheen of metal, and the coarseness of the gravel around the train tracks. The precisely rendered attire of passengers at the platform and the driver and inspector walking past the engine is a characteristic typical of the Company School paintings which provide a plethora of visual data about life in the colonies. Through a quotidian scene, the present lot highlights the technological advancements that swept across India in the mid-to-late 19th century.

Company School Painting

The Company School of painting refers to paintings made in British India in the late 1700s and early 1800s. With the British East India Company expanding its reign over the South Asian subcontinent, a large number of its employees from England were posted in India. As they travelled extensively across India, they were taken in by its flora and fauna, ancient monuments, local people and their lifestyles. Some employees hired local artists to undertake precise documentation, and trained them in the European norms of perspective, scale and proportion, and shading, including a muted colour palette. The artists combined these new techniques with the ornamentation and detailing of Mughal painting traditions to give rise to a hybrid style. Company School paintings are identifiable by their muted watercolour tones and perspective construction that is markedly different from miniature paintings. Employees of the British East India Company often sent these paintings of their new environment back to family and friends in England.

Company School painting developed in cities which were major political and economic centres for the British with, Calcutta and Patna being the most significant. English art historian Mildred Archer notes that by 1800, Patna was an important administrative headquarters which was home to European judges, barristers, lawyers, chaplains, merchants and doctors, as well as wealthy Indian landowners. Eminent artists such as Bani Lal, Hulas Lal, and Shiva Lal received patronage from the city's wealthy residents and further enhanced its reputation as a centre for artistic development. Their paintings document animals, locals and their attire, as well as quotidian scenes such as people gathered at a railway station or women on their way to temples. Facial features and contouring show a great degree of finesse, while perspective and shading are in the European style. Works by these three artists are among the Company School paintings in this catalogue.




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  Lot 28 of 87  

CLASSICAL INDIAN ART
10-11 APRIL 2018

Estimate
Rs 3,00,000 - 5,00,000
$4,690 - 7,815

Winning Bid
Rs 3,21,792
$5,028
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)










 



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