Great Banyan Tree, Calcutta

William Simpson

DESCRIPTION

Between 1859 and 1862 Simpson travelled through India, including Kashmir and the region of Ladakh, Tibet and Ceylon, producing some two hundred and fifty watercolours, of which this is one. 

DETAILS
  • Artist

    William Simpson

  • Date

    1859

  • Medium

    Watercolour on paper

  • Object number

    855

  • Dimensions unframed

    24 × 24.5 cm

  • Dimensions framed

    48 × 56.5 × 2 cm

  • Place depicted

    Kolkata (1275004)

  • Marks

    Signed, titled and dated bottom left

  • Subject

    Landscape

ARTIST PROFILE

William Simpson RI, 1823-1899

Watercolourist, illustrator, religious scholar, linguist, archaeologist and traveller, Simpson was the first true war artist. Born in Glasgow, he was employed by a firm of lithographers there until 1851, when he moved to London to work for the lithographers Day and Son, illustrating the Great Exhibition. In 1854 he was sent by the art dealers Colnaghi to record the Crimean War. The resulting book, The Seat of War in the East, established him as a pioneer of war reporting. He visited many parts of the world, recording wars, state occasions, royal marriages and other events for the Illustrated London News, Daily News and other publications.