Attributed to Shaikh Muhammad Amir of Karraya: an officer of the Calcutta Police Calcutta, circa 1840
£2,000 - £3,000
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Find your local specialistAttributed to Shaikh Muhammad Amir of Karraya: an officer of the Calcutta Police
Calcutta, circa 1840
Calcutta, circa 1840
226 x 123 mm.
Footnotes
Shaikh Muhammad Amir came from Karraya, an outlying district of Calcutta, and was the best-known artist working for the British in that city. His career began in the 1830s and his watercolours of the grand buildings of Calcutta, its gardens, animals and servants, were popular commissions from his British patrons, capturing well the elegance of the period. For comparison see: S. C. Welch, Room for Wonder, New York 1978, nos. 20-23; M. Archer, Company Drawings in the India Office Library, London 1972, cat. no. 61; M. Archer, Company Paintings, London 1992, nos. 80 and 81; and the sale in these rooms, Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 10th April 2008, lots 117 and 118.