Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Resisting the Spread of the British East India Company across the Subcontinent

By the late eighteenth century, the faltering Mughal Empire created a power vacuum in South Asia that ignited outbreaks of civil war among regional potentates vying for control, including Awadh in northern India and Mysore to the south. American publications, like Bartholomew Burges’ A Series of Indostan Letters (1790) relate that the British East India Company leveraged the situation to seize power in the region, thus transforming from a commercial enterprise into a colonial one. Yet the British could not entice sufficient numbers of Europeans to fight as they expanded. Instead, they turned to the military labor market in India, hiring local mercenaries as soldiers, or sepoys (from Persian sipahi, or “cavalrymen’), to fight their own countrymen. Travelers and those watching events unfolding from abroad would closely note the uniforms used to demarcate sepoys from the countrymen they fought, and eagerly adapt the regional dress and accoutrements of resisting Indian principalities as the latest exoticizing fashions.

Original gouache panorama on long scroll, finely executed and heightened in gold depicting a procession including elephants and camels with howdahs, numerous attendants with banners, some leading animals including a leopard, litters and litter-bearers; British officers and officials riding an elephant; Arabic captions below figures. Original water-color painted scroll by a Company artist showing a state procession with mounted soldiers and band, horse artillery, elephants with howdahs, camels, conveyances, etc., against a background of buildings and spectators; captioned in English. Original unsigned watercolor copied from an earlier painting, now lost. 'Nawab Sadat Ali Khan (r. 1798-1814) seated with his son in a box-like takht (throne) at a durbar, surrounded by the most important people, Indian and European, in Lucknow at the end of the 18th century. full-length portrait in crown, court dress, and Garter cloak, leaning against desk or table, drapery, column and view in background. Original unsigned watercolor; supernatural being at upper right shooting arrows at European soldiers, other soldiers inside fort below, encouraged by musicians and woman. Text at bottom in Urdu. original gouache painting of soldiers attacking town, Mahratta horsemen charging Steel-engraved plate (from book) by J. Rogers after Singleton; Indian leader and soldiers overwhelmed by British beneath arcade, figures of Indian soldier and British soldier at left and right, vignette of surrender of Tippoo's sons at bottom. Two-column Ode surveys events abroad and at home, especially Indian frontier warfare, American naval prowess in North Africa and a fire in Boston.