A ROSE-COLOURED STARLING (STURNUS ROSEUS) ON THE BRANCH OF A FIG TREE (FICUS CARIA)
A ROSE-COLOURED STARLING (STURNUS ROSEUS) ON THE BRANCH OF A FIG TREE (FICUS CARIA)
A ROSE-COLOURED STARLING (STURNUS ROSEUS) ON THE BRANCH OF A FIG TREE (FICUS CARIA)
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A ROSE-COLOURED STARLING (STURNUS ROSEUS) ON THE BRANCH OF A FIG TREE (FICUS CARIA)

COMPANY SCHOOL LUCKNOW OR CALCUTTA, INDIA, CIRCA 1775-85

Details
A ROSE-COLOURED STARLING (STURNUS ROSEUS) ON THE BRANCH OF A FIG TREE (FICUS CARIA)
COMPANY SCHOOL LUCKNOW OR CALCUTTA, INDIA, CIRCA 1775-85
Translucent and opaque pigments with gum arabic, pencil and pen on unidentified watermarked paper, Persian and English inscriptions in black ink below and numbered '481' in the lower left, further inscribed 'oriolus' in pencil in the lower left, the verso plain, small paper ticket inscribed with a further identificatory inscription affixed to the verso, mounted, framed and glazed
Folio 18 ½ x 11 ½in. (47 x 29.1cm.)
Provenance
Claude Martin (1735-1800), Lucknow
Charles Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool (1729-1808),
Thence by descent until 2001,
With Niall Hobhouse, until sold Christie's London, 22 May 2008, lot 19
Private collection, England, 2008-2024
Engraved
Below, in Persian, kusnai-i nar 'male starling'
In English, 'Rose coloured .... (illegible), male, same as Europe. B.C.'

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Louise Broadhurst Director, International Head of Department

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Lot Essay

First identified by Linnaeus in 1758, the rose-coloured starling has a distinctive pink body contrasting with its black head, wings and tail. The bird is typically found in the open steppes of Central Asia and eastern Europe but migrates to India in vast numbers for winter where there are abundant locusts and cereals for food. A painting from the Claude Martin album of a rose-coloured starling with its first winter coat, which appears rather different to the one shown here, was sold in these Rooms from the Niall Hobhouse Collection, 22 May 2008, lot 20 (part lot).

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