One of nineteen drawings illustrating processes in the manufacture of opium at the Opium Factory at Gulzarbagh, Patna, in Bihar.
Painting
ca.1857 (made)
ca.1857 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This Company Painting (a painting made by an Indian artist for the British in India) is done on mica (talc) and comes from a series of nineteen illustrating processes in the manufacture of opium at the opium factory at Gulzarbagh in Patna, Bihar. According to the artist Ishwari Prasad, his grandfather, Shiva Lal (c.1817-1887), began to make the designs for these paintings in 1857. They were commissioned by Dr D. R. Lyall (the personal assistant in charge of opium-making) for a series of wall paintings in the Gulzarbagh factory. However, Lyall was killed in 1857, during the so-called Indian Mutiny, and the scheme was abandoned. This picture shows the opium being tested for purity.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | One of nineteen drawings illustrating processes in the manufacture of opium at the Opium Factory at Gulzarbagh, Patna, in Bihar. (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Gouache on mica. |
Brief description | Painting; gouache on mica, Drying, Patna, ca.1857. |
Physical description | Drying. |
Dimensions |
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Style | |
Object history | According to the old Patna artist Ishwari Prasad, the designs for these mica paintings were first made in 1857 by his grandfather, Shiva Lal (ca.1817-ca.1887). |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | This Company Painting (a painting made by an Indian artist for the British in India) is done on mica (talc) and comes from a series of nineteen illustrating processes in the manufacture of opium at the opium factory at Gulzarbagh in Patna, Bihar. According to the artist Ishwari Prasad, his grandfather, Shiva Lal (c.1817-1887), began to make the designs for these paintings in 1857. They were commissioned by Dr D. R. Lyall (the personal assistant in charge of opium-making) for a series of wall paintings in the Gulzarbagh factory. However, Lyall was killed in 1857, during the so-called Indian Mutiny, and the scheme was abandoned. This picture shows the opium being tested for purity. |
Bibliographic reference | Archer, Mildred. Company Paintings Indian Paintings of the British period
Victoria and Albert Museum Indian Series London: Victoria and Albert Museum, Maplin Publishing, 1992 201 p. ISBN 0944142303 |
Collection | |
Accession number | 07361:10/(IS) |
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Record created | May 23, 2005 |
Record URL |
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