International artists have made India their muse for centuries now, and their views of the country can be divisive as well as assimilative
When they first started coming to India in the 18th century, European artists weren’t prepared for what the country had to offer—neither its rigours nor the extremely lucrative commissions that made them wealthy beyond belief (though payments from royal families did not always come on time and sometimes required a nudge from British officials to materialise).
No matter how long they toured or stayed in India, its impact on their work was obvious. Initially, artists painted only her landscapes and people in the realistic style; later, influenced by local traditions, what emerged was the Company School, and attempts to merge rather than diverge. Lithographs and aquatints of the country were all the rage, but soon Indian artists from the art schools in Bombay and Calcutta began to paint just as well as their Western counterparts for far less remuneration, rendering them, as it were, obsolete. Still, artists have continued to come to work or settle in India, and their engagement has grown to include the native narrative in what still remains an occidental perception of a many-layered land.
Olivia Fraser (b. 1965)
Mt Govardhan, 2010-2011
Blame it on her genes, but olivia fraser was drawn to India the same way that an ancestor, James Baillie Fraser, had been, to paint its people and architecture against their native landscape. While James did precisely that (though he also commissioned other artists to paint for his anthropological work, Fraser Album), Olivia could easily pass off as a Company painter from that era for her eclectic style that combines Indian miniature and folk art with British realism, which resulted in a morphed style that had become fashionable in the cantonments. A student of modern languages, she has learnt the techniques of miniature art from its masters. She has been drawn to the Nathdwara Pichwai school and her latest body of work has drawn its inspiration from it even though it marked a change in her journey as a chronicler (alongside her writer husband, William Dalrymple) of India’s infinite tales. Moving away from actual watercolour landscapes and people’s portraits, her work is now rendered in the abstract as she grapples to deal with India’s complex layers of spirituality in a manner that is essentially simple, while at the same time evangelical.
Ray Meeker (b. 1944)
Eye of the Needle, 2014
an outstanding example of a ceramicist, Ray Meeker came to India’s Pondicherry in 1970 where, with Deborah Smith, he set up a kiln to launch Golden Bridge Pottery in 1971. Till then, ceramic pottery practice had been extremely limited —other than traditional potters, there was Delhi’s Blue Pottery—and it continues to struggle to be recognised as an art form despite a number of artists practicing in the medium. Meeker studied ceramics in California, Smith had apprenticed in Japan, and now they were introducing the concept of glazed stoneware pottery by hand in India. While Smith handled the production, Meeker was more experimental, even making fire-stabilised mud houses. He taught local apprentices, resulting in a number of kilns and pottery workshops in the neighbourhood. Meeker has always seen himself as a mentor but has remained at heart an artist, often experimenting with both form and texture as his students or associates continue to stretch themselves in the discovery of ceramic fine art.
(This story appears in the Nov-Dec 2015 issue of ForbesLife India. To visit our Archives, click here.)