In 1814-1815, India's then Governor General Lord Francis Edward Rawdon-Hastings had embarked upon a journey upcountry from Calcutta to Punjab and back to take stock of lands under his governance. Besides his wife Lady Flora and his children, accompanying him was a massive coterie of nearly 10,000 men including Sita Ram.
At least 60 from a collection of 229 never before published paintings of Colonial India by the Bengali artist are on display as part of an ongoing exhibition titled "Sita Ram / Picturesque Views of India/ Lord Hasting's Journey from Calcutta to Punjab, 1814-15," which was recently inaugurated by Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhra Raje at the newly renovated Bikaner House here.
"All those vignettes that came out when we walked around are extremely interesting. This is a treasure. Most of all I am really proud that we have been able to give back this beautiful building where no just us but so many of us will be able to enjoy," Raje said.
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The exhibition has been curated by J P Losty who was formerly Curator-in-charge of the Indian visual collections in the British Library.
Sita Ram's paintings seem to bring alive the India from the bygone era with the representations of, for instance, the Lord's convoy of boats on Ganga at different points of time in Bihar, West Bengal or Benaras, with its fading azure skies, the slightly muddy skies and barely visible settlements in the distance.
The exhibition is inspired from a book of the same name
published by Roli Books that besides acting as a journal of Lord Hasting's 17-month-long travel from Kolkata to Punjab, also offers an insight into Sita Ram's style of paintings, which was often a, "sharp departure from the accurate 'Company' view of the Indian monuments."
"He is certainly one of the greatest Indian artists of the 1970s and in his work we can see him getting to pick new ways to depict landscape and architecture," Losty who wasn't present at the event said in a message that he had sent across.
The show is scheduled to continue here till December 31.