Often, nothing brings a place alive as does a painting. While European painting has a long tradition
Goswamy writes about the painting: “The unnamed Kamnagar painter of Kutch — having seen a whole range of European engravings of landscapes and city views — sets out here to paint what can only be called an ‘atmospheric picture’. The elements he draws upon for doing this are the rumbling grey clouds in the sky, the walled town of Anjar in the far distance, the procession of the Rao, the retinue that spills over the paths and the fields, and the green expanse of land all around. He invests the scene with a distinct sense of place and of occasion, but the emphasis is clearly upon creating an atmosphere.”
Goswamy thinks that the painter is celebrating the land as much as the Rao, or the importance of the fortified city of Anjar in this painting. He writes, ”And then of course there is the expanse of land, the cultivated fields close to the city walls taking over where the brown, fallow land in the foreground ends. It is all, in its own way, a poetic celebration of this fertile tract of land.”
art and culture
European painting
Indian painting