BOTANICAL STUDY FROM THE FAMILY ROTACEAE, GENUS CITRUS
THREE BOTANICAL STUDIES FROM THE RIND ALBUM
BOTANICAL STUDY FROM THE FAMILY ROTACEAE, GENUS CITRUS

COMPANY SCHOOL, CALCUTTA, CIRCA 1800

Details
BOTANICAL STUDY FROM THE FAMILY ROTACEAE, GENUS CITRUS
COMPANY SCHOOL, CALCUTTA, CIRCA 1800
Watercolour on paper, the branch finely painted showing the arrangement of leaves and a yellowish fruit, a cross-section of the fruit below, framed and glazed
21¾ x 15¼in. (55.3 x 38.8cm.)
Literature
Stuart Cary Welch, Room for Wonder - Indian Painting during the British Period 1760-1880, 1978, 12a, b, & c, 13, pp. 45-49

Lot Essay

The East India Company founded its trading centres in India in the early 17th century but it was not until the second half of the 18th century that East India Company employees began to commission Mughal trained artists to produce watercolours to English taste, thus creating what is now known as Company School painting. Among the most beautiful are the early natural history drawings of Indian fauna and flora. Menageries and botanical gardens were established in Calcutta and Madras at the end of the 18th century and exquisite illustrations of their animal, plant and bird life were commissioned by such patrons as Sir Elijah and Lady Impey, the Marquess Wellesley and Lady Clive.

Major James Nathaniel Rind (d.1813) was another enthusiastic observer of Indian life and collector of paintings. He was in India from 1778 to 1804 where he became a brigade major in Calcutta in 1801. He commissioned a large collection of botanical studies, some of which are illustrated in the exhibition 'Room for Wonder' (Stuart Cary Welch, Room for Wonder - Indian Painting during the British Period 1760-1880, 1978, 12a, b, & c, 13, pp. 45-49).

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