Company Painting
Company Painting — Study Notes
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Company Painting
ExplanationCompany Painting
Before the arrival of the British in India, Indian art served various traditional and religious purposes. It was commonly found in the form of statues on temple walls, miniature paintings illustrating manuscripts, and decorative art on the walls of mud houses in villages. However, with the advent of colonial rule around the eighteenth century, the British developed an interest in documenting the customs, manners, flora, fauna, and landscapes of India. To fulfill this need, many English officers commissioned local Indian artists to paint scenes from their surroundings. These artists were often migrants from erstwhile royal courts such as Murshidabad, Lucknow, or Delhi. To satisfy their British patrons, these artists adapted their traditional painting styles by incorporating close observation and naturalism, a hallmark of European art, instead of relying solely on memory or established artistic conventions. This fusion of traditional Indian techniques with European realism gave rise to the Company School of Painting, also known as Company Painting. The artworks were mostly created on paper and gained popularity not only in India but also in Britain, where albums of these paintings were in demand. Company Painting thus represents a unique hybrid art form that documents colonial India through the eyes of Indian artists adapting to new aesthetic demands.
- Indian art before British rule was primarily religious and decorative, including temple statues and miniature paintings.
- British officers commissioned Indian artists to document Indian life, flora, fauna, and landscapes.
- Artists adapted traditional styles by incorporating European techniques of close observation and realism.
- Company Painting is a hybrid style combining Indian and European artistic elements.
- Paintings were mostly on paper and popular both in India and Britain.
- Artists often came from former royal courts and had to adjust to new patronage demands.
- 📌 Company Painting: A style of painting developed during British colonial rule combining Indian traditional art with European realism.
- 📌 Close observation: Artistic technique focusing on detailed and realistic depiction of subjects.
- 📌 Miniature painting: Small, detailed paintings often illustrating manuscripts.
Raja Ravi Varma
ExplanationRaja Ravi Varma
The advent of photography in India during the mid-nineteenth century led to the decline of Company Painting, as the camera provided a more accurate and efficient means of documentation. However, the academic style of oil painting, which used European techniques and mediums to depict Indian subjects, flourished in British-established art schools. Raja Ravi Varma, a largely self-taught artist from the Travancore Court in Kerala, became the most successful exponent of this style. He mastered academic realism by imitating European paintings popular in Indian palaces and applied this technique to portray scenes from Indian epics such as the Ramayana and Mahabharata. His paintings became immensely popular and were widely reproduced as oleographs, entering the homes of many Indians as calendar images. Despite his success, by the late nineteenth century, with the rise of Indian nationalism, this academic style was criticized for being too Western and foreign to authentically represent Indian myths and history. This criticism paved the way for the emergence of the Bengal School of Art, which sought to revive indigenous Indian artistic traditions and create a national style of painting.
- Photography's arrival reduced the demand for Company Painting.
- Academic oil painting style flourished in British art schools.
- Raja Ravi Varma mastered European academic realism to depict Indian mythological themes.
- His works were widely reproduced and popularized through oleographs and calendars.
- Nationalists later criticized this style as too Western and foreign.
- The Bengal School emerged as a reaction promoting Indian artistic traditions.
- 📌 Academic realism: A European painting style focusing on realistic and detailed depiction using oil paints.
- 📌 Oleograph: A type of printed reproduction of paintings, popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The Bengal School
ExplanationThe Bengal School
The Bengal School of Art was an influential art movement and style that originated in Calcutta (now Kolkata) in the early twentieth century. Although the name suggests a regional focus, the movement's influence extended beyond Bengal, impacting artis
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Fine Art · Class 12