Thomas Daniell, R.A. (1749-1840) and William Daniell, R.A. (1769-1837)

The Khoh River, near Diosa, Garhwal, Uttar Pradesh

Details
Thomas Daniell, R.A. (1749-1840) and William Daniell, R.A. (1769-1837)
The Khoh River, near Diosa, Garhwal, Uttar Pradesh
inscribed 'Near DUSA Sirinagur.' (on the artists' original mount, overmounted) and further inscribed and numbered 'No - 11. Near Dusa Sirinagur mountains-' (on the reverse of the artists' original mount)
pencil and watercolour within a black-lined border, on the artist's original mount
14 7/8 x 21 1/8in. (37.8 x 53.7cm.)
Exhibited
Commonwealth Institute, 1960, no.42.
Spink, 1974, no.17.
Engraved
T. and W. Daniell, aquatint engraving, 1 July 1804, for Oriental Scenery, vol.IV, no.18.

Lot Essay

The Daniells passed Diosa on 23 April. William was delighted to find some wild raspberries growing, and collected them to make a pudding; he also noted the very different varieties of trees growing at this altitude.
'Dusa stands on the banks of the Koah Nullah, a few miles, it is said, below its source. The forms of the mountains are, from this point, extremely bold, and all around the general effect is majestic. They are richly clothed with wood, and, in many parts, even to their summits; where oak, fir, with many of the forest trees of India, are produced; and the cultivation of grain is carried up their sides to a great height.
In these secluded parts, scarcely affording a single foot of level ground, and where the whole surface, tossed into confusion, offers nothing but the perpetual labour of climbing and descending, there is a considerable degree of population; and pleasant villages are scattered about among the hills, often in situations where it might be supposed eagles alone would build their tenements; for they seem accessible only to fowls of the air, and not to man. But security is a principal source of happiness, and these regions offer few temptations to the ambition and rapacity of those exalted spirits, whose insatiable thirst of glory fills the world with mischief and misery. The peaceful inhabitants of these hills not only enjoy a secure retreat from the perils of polished society, but a luxuriant vegetation supplies them with food, and also with gums and other articles of commerce, with which, by sale or barter, they procure from the distant plains such conveniences as their moderate system of life requires' (Oriental Scenery).

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