The Bull Nandi in the courtyard of the Golden Temple, Benares by william Simpson - 1864
William Simpson was commissioned to go to India by his employers, Day and Sons, the London lithography firm. Having established his reputation by documenting the Crimean war in 1854, he was instructed to sketch well-known sites in and around Delhi associated with the heavy fighting of 1857.
Simpson arrived in Calcutta (Kolkata) in 1859 and travelled widely. His rapid pencil drawings formed the preparatory studies for his finished watercolours which were done after his return to London in 1862. His fond memories of India, as noted in his journal, resulted in these highly coloured, evocative and romantic interpretations of the Indian landscape.
Simpson, a largely self-taught artist from a poor family in Scotland, had hoped to achieve fame on the publication of his paintings in a lavishly illustrated volume. Unfortunately, financial problems led to the poorly printed India Ancient and Modern containing only fifty images. Simpson called it the ‘big disaster’ of his life.
The V&A has the single most important collection of watercolours made during Simpson's first expedition to India.
Source : V&A, London
Where in Benares?
echanting.!!
Statue of Nandi - the Sacred Bull - Benares India - 1910s Postcard: http://www.oldindianphotos.in/2010/11/statue-of-nandi-sacred-bull-benares.html