Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Album of Indian Costumes and Scenes

View original record

Artist(s) unknown, Murshidabad, Patna or Benares or Trichinopoly
Opaque watercolor on mica, c. 1851
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


The transparent and somewhat flexible mineral known as mica maintains enough stability to withstand the temperature and humidity fluctuations of India. Historically, it served as lantern- and windowpanes or as a cheaper substitute for colored glass in processional structures during the Muslim month of Muharram. Indian artists also produced mica paintings for foreign buyers, including BEIC employees who considered such works more as exotic novelties than art objects. Letters from travelers relate that mica paintings were commonly sold at riverside markets in ready-made packets of six or twelve, called firqa. Many of these easily transported mica paintings showcased sartorial distinctions of rank, documenting the Indian caste system through a variety of character types, trades, ceremonies, processions, and scenes of daily life. This album’s selection of sepoy soldiers in uniform may have appealed to foreign buyers more familiar with costume books and albums circulating between Europe and the Ottoman Empire since the late sixteenth century.