Saturday, March 9, 2024

Antique Print 1875 Prince Wales India Bombay Guicowar Baroda Mosque

 WILLIAM SIMPSON (1823-99)

Visit of the Prince of Wales to India, November 1875 - January 1876: Entry of the Prince of Wales into Baroda on an elephant, 19 November dated 19 Nov 1875

Pencil, wash and bodycolour | 26.3 x 42.5 cm (whole object) | RCIN 921109

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  • A pencil and wash drawing depicting Albert Edward, the Prince of Wales, riding on the back of an elephant in a howdah at the head of a procession. Inscribed, dated and signed: Wm Simpson / Arrival of H.R.H. The Prince of Wales at Baroda. 19th Nov. 1875 

    In October 1875, Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, the eldest son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert and later King Edward VII (r.1901-10), embarked on an extensive tour of the Indian subcontinent. The Prince of Wales visited more than 21 towns and cities across parts of modern-day India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Nepal before returning to England in May 1876. Albert Edward’s tour of India was envisaged as a way of forging diplomatic links between the Indian rulers and the British Crown. The Prince exchanged gifts with each ruler he met and some of the most significant Indian works of art in the Royal Collection today were acquired during this tour. On his return to England, Albert Edward arranged for these to be exhibited to the wider public, first at the South Kensington Museum (now the Victoria & Albert Museum) and then at nine further venues across England, Scotland and Europe. In England and Scotland alone, more than 2.5 million visitors saw the Indian works of art. 

    The prince visited the royal court of Baroda (present-day Vadodara) during his three-week stay in Bombay (present-day Mumbai) at the beginning of the tour. This illustration was reproduced in one of the special supplements published by the Illustrated London News as part of their coverage of the tour (18 December 1875), where his arrival at Baroda was described as 'a rather grand affair'; the newspaper also reported that 'At the request of his Royal Highness, the sketch that our Special Artist had made of the procession entering Baroda was shown to him, and it was approved by his Royal Highness'.

    William Simpson was an artist and lithographer who worked for the Illustrated London News as a Special Artist from 1866. He was sent by that newspaper in October 1875 to India to cover the tour made by the Prince of Wales; he had previously spent three years travelling in the Indian subcontinent. In 1876 over 200 of his sketches from the tour were exhibited at the Burlington Gallery; the Prince of Wales visited the exhibition and bought fifteen sketches, and Queen Victoria later saw his drawings at Windsor Castle and acquired four. Twelve of the works bought by Albert Edward were reproduced as photographic illustrations in a separate publication by Simpson (see RCIN 1054595).