c. 1820
This drawing represents Baishakh (April - May). It is one of three preparatory drawings from a set of illustrations of Baramasa poems given by Kathy Burton Jones. The poems, which appear in Devanagari script on the reverse of the drawings, describe the months of the year with a focus on the festivals that ushered in each season. On the obverse, notations in Devanagari script indicate the colors for the finished painting. Each scene centers on the romantic bond between man and woman, a metaphor for life-continuing concepts. Here a couple seated on a platform in a sylvan setting converse amiably.
28.6 x 19.7 cm (11 1/4 x 7 3/4 in.)
[H.C. Mehra], Calcutta (November 16, 1953); purchase by L.C. and P. Wyman, American couple; gift to Art Complex Museum, 189 Alden Street, Duxbury (1960s); purchase by Kathy Burton Jones [Norman Hurst], Hurst Gallery, 53 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge (2004); gift to Harvard Art Museum (2009).
Leather
19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on paper
18th-19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on three palm leaves hinged with cotton thread
19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on paper; Rajput Style
19th centuryIndianOpaque watercolor on paper
19th centuryIndianInk and color on paper; Rajput Style, Kota or Bundi School
19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on paper; Rajput Style, Kota School
19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on paper
19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on paper
19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on paper; Rajput Style
19th centuryIndianGraphite on paper.
19th centuryIndianInk and opaque watercolor on paper
19th centuryIndian