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Title(s)
Lucknow from the Gomti.
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Additional Title(s)
Lucknow panorama
Earlier title, from Abbey: Lucknow from the Ganges -
Published/Created
Lucknow, India, 1826.
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Physical Description
1 drawing : watercolor and gouache, with gold ; sheet 31 x 1128 cm, rolled to 31 x 11 cm (scroll format)
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Holdings
Rare Books and Manuscripts
Flat B 11
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection
Accessible in the Study Room [Request] -
Copyright Status
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Full Alma Record
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Classification
Drawings & Watercolors
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Notes
Restricted fragile material. Use requires permission of the Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts.
Abbey, J.R. Life in England in aquatint and lithography, 1770-1860, 500
Accompanied by a "Description of the panoramic view of Lucknow," 4 pages in pen and black ink, dated Decr., 1826. The manuscript provides English transcriptions of "the names corresponding with the Hindostany ones, written underneath."
Selected exhibitions: "India's fabled city : the art of courtly Lucknow" (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, Dec. 12, 2010-Feb. 27, 2011; and Musée Guimet, Paris, Apr. 6-July 11, 2011)
Markel, S. India's fabled city, p. 84-86, 254
Restricted fragile material. Use requires permission of the Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts. 22837039420008651
Panorama of Lucknow, within a border of black and gold. The places depicted are noted in Hindustani, along the lower edge of the panorama.
"Presumably made for the same British visitor whose handwritten notes identifying the buildings accompanied the scroll ... The artist employed European-style perspective in his depiction of this [the Shah Najaf Imambara] and several other buildings, many presented obliquely as they must have appeared from the Gomti River. The scroll is, in fact, a fairly accurate topographical representation of Lucknow as viewed from the Gomti and a valuable guide to the buildings that have since disappeared ... The central portion of the scroll is particularly interesting in depicting the riverine buildings that would eventually become incorporated into the Bara Chattar Manzil Palace complex ... The artist of the Yale scroll attempted to depict an accurate view of the city for his European patron. This concern, in addition to the style of the painting, is typical of the many 'Company-school' works--so called for their obvious adaptations to European visual tastes--that depict Indian architectural monuments."--Markel. -
Subject Terms
Gomti River (India) -- Pictorial works. | Lucknow (India) -- Buildings, structures, etc. -- Pictorial works. | Lucknow (India) -- Pictorial works.
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Form/Genre
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Export
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IIIF Manifest
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