Page 215 - March 23 2022 Boinghams NYC Indian and Himalayan Art
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PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED WEST COAST COLLECTION
 488
 AN ILLUSTRATION TO THE 'IMPEY' RAMAYANA: KEVAT
 WASHES RAMA'S FEET BEFORE THEY CROSS THE GANGES
 INDIA, BENGAL, MURSHIDABAD, CIRCA 1770
 Folio 12æ x 5¬ in. (32.4 x 14.3 cm.)
 Image 11Ω x 7æ in. (29.2 x 19.7 cm.)
 $30,000-50,000
 PROVENANCE:
 Collection of Sir Elijah and Lady Mary Impey, Calcutta and London.
 Collection of Sir Thomas Phillips Bt. (1792-1872), London.
 Sotheby’s London, November 26, 1968, (part of lot 415).
 Maggs Bros. London, August 1969, no. 168.
 Private collection, Connecticut.
 Bonhams, New York, 19 March 2012, lot 1173.
 The Ramayana series from which the present painting belongs is named for
 its  patrons,  Sir  Elijah  Impey  (1732-1806),  the  Chief  Justice  of  the  Supreme
 Court in Calcutta from 1774-1790, and his wife Lady Mary Impey (1749-1818) a
 British natural historian. The couple is most remembered for their commission
 of a collection of large company school paintings of birds, animals, and native
 plants,  now  revered  as  the  Impey  Album.  The  present  series,  along  with
 similarly composed Ragamala and Razmnama manuscripts, showcases their
 broader  interest  in  the  arts  of  Bengal,  diverting  from  the  company  school
 aesthetic they are most associated with, in favor of a more regional style of
 folk painting in Murshidabad.

 The style, color palette and composition of the Impey Ramayana series mirrors
 contemporaneous pata scrolls from Bengal, which uses a registered format
 as a narrative device for epics such as the Ramayana and Bhagavata Purana.
 Works  of  this  style  were  quite  unusual  commissions  for  foreigners,  who  by
 their  own  standards  considered  the  Mughal  and  Company  school  ateliers
 more refined. Nevertheless, the series is celebrated for its vivid color scheme,
 bold execution and stylized figures.
 The  artists  of  this  splendid  series  creatively  use  geographic  features,  such
 as the mountain range and river stream to create narrative registers within
 the  painting.  In  the  upper  register,  Rama  and  Sita  kneel  before  an  ascetic,
 while Lakshmana respectfully stands behind them. In the lower register, the
 boatman Kevat washes Rama’s feet before ferrying the trio across the Ganges.
 His boat, with a tiger figurehead, awaits them in the foreground river.
 The  provenance  of  this  painting  is  verified  by  the  seal  of  Sir  Elijah  Impey
 stamped on the verso. The series, which consisted of 44 paintings, was later
 acquired by Sir Thomas Phillipps Bt (1792-1872). The folios were much later
 dispersed at auction at Sotheby’s London, 26 November 1968. Further pages
 from this series are at the British Library (acc. no. Add.Or.5725), Los Angeles
 Country Museum of Art (acc. no. M.72.88.3), and the Asian Art Museum, San
 Francisco (acc. no. 2011.22).











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