TWO PAINTINGS DEPICTING IMPENDING RAIN STORMS
PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF STAFFORD ELIAS
TWO PAINTINGS DEPICTING IMPENDING RAIN STORMS

KANGRA SCHOOL, NORTH INDIA, CIRCA 1820

Details
TWO PAINTINGS DEPICTING IMPENDING RAIN STORMS
KANGRA SCHOOL, NORTH INDIA, CIRCA 1820
Lovers on a rooftop watching the approaching storm; a lady on a swing similarly watching the storm clouds, opaque watercolor heightened with gold and silver on paper, colored margins, mounted framed and glazed
First painting 8 ½ x 7 ½ in. (21.6 x 19 cm.); folio 11 ¼ x 10 in. (28.7 x 25.4 cm.); second painting 9 1/8 x 6 ¾ in. (23.3 x 17.1 cm.); folio 12 1/8 x 8 1/8 in. (30.8 x 20.6 cm.)

Lot Essay

Both paintings show the excitement of the impending storm in the monsoon season. In the first the lovers go out onto the upper terrace to watch the clouds build, as the thunder snakes down out of the clouds and the distant city is already in the midst of the storm. The subject of the second, the lady on a swing, is frequently associated with the three-day festival of Teej during the month of Sravana, excitedly celebrating the impending monsoon rains. Other Pahari versions of the same scene, in increasingly countrified settings, are in the Victoria and Albert Museum (inv. no. IM.73-1912), in the Jagdish Mittal Collection (John Seyller, Pahari Paintings in the Jagdish and Kamla Mittal Museum of Indian Art, Hyderabad, 2014, no.104, pp.296-7) and in the Kronos Collection promised gift to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (Terence McInerney, Steven M. Kossak and Navina Najat Haider, Divine Pleasures, Painting from India’s Rajpuit Courts, The Kronos Collection, exhibition catalogue, New York, 2016, no.73, pp.200-201).

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