Artwork Page for Middle Class Students and Staff, Bishop Cotton School, Shimla (verso)

Details / Information for Middle Class Students and Staff, Bishop Cotton School, Shimla (verso)

Middle Class Students and Staff, Bishop Cotton School, Shimla (verso)

c. 1882–87
(Indian, 1844–1905)
Culture
India
Measurements
Image: 19.4 x 27 cm (7 5/8 x 10 5/8 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Raja Deen Dayal is regarded now, and was considered during his lifetime, to be India’s most important 19th-century photographer.

Description

These photographs are part of an album, now disassembled, of around 105 photographs taken in India between 1885 and summer 1887 that provide glimpses into the lives of the British colonial elite and royal and upper-class Indians. The museum holds another group of 37 pictures from this album (2016.266), which was probably commissioned by a British civil servant visiting or working in India around 1888 as a personal souvenir of his experiences there.
A horizontally oriented albumen print depicts over fifty boys and men with light to medium-dark skin tones posed outdoors, most looking at us. In the foreground, youths sit on a wide, striped rug, some holding hats. Behind them, rows of students and staff in dark suits or robes stand or sit against an ivy-covered stone wall. Arched windows with diamond-shaped panes punctuate the facade. Adult men stand on both ends.

Middle Class Students and Staff, Bishop Cotton School, Shimla (verso)

c. 1882–87

Raja Deen Dayal

(Indian, 1844–1905)
India

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