HomeNewsTrendsHow 19th century photography fixed pre-colonial India's image in the world

How 19th century photography fixed pre-colonial India's image in the world

An exhibition in Delhi makes a case to see 19th century photos of Indian monuments as 'objects to think with'.

September 28, 2024 / 08:09 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
William Henry Pigou's 'Mysore, Idol car at the temple of Chamondee (Chamundi Temple)'; silver albumen print from waxed paper negative mounted on card, 1856; print size: 11.0 x 15.0 in; paper size: 14.0 x 21.7 in. (Image courtesy DAG)
William Henry Pigou's 'Mysore, Idol car at the temple of Chamondee (Chamundi Temple)'; silver albumen print from waxed paper negative mounted on card, 1856; print size: 11.0 x 15.0 in; paper size: 14.0 x 21.7 in. (Image courtesy DAG)

In September 1924, then Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) chief John Marshall submitted an article and supporting photos to 'The Illustrated London New'. The article was about an urban ancient Indian civilization. The accompanying pictures depicted finds at archaeological sites across Punjab and Sindh in undivided India: photos of intricately carved stone seals, clay pots, beaded necklaces and figurines shared space with images of sophisticated brick buildings and streets laid out in grids in the multi-page spread.

The black-and-white photos that Marshall sent to 'The Illustrated London News' were the latest in a by-then established tradition of field survey photos. For, in 19th century India, photography had rapidly become better, easier and cheaper at the same time that archaeological and architectural surveys were gathering steam.

Story continues below Advertisement

Despite the expense and difficulties of making photographs in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by mixing chemicals on site and sometimes joining multiple photos to rephotograph the complete picture, photos were much faster than painting — and to some degree more accurate — as study and archival materials. Plus, they offered the advantage of studying them at leisure even after the site visit was over.

Indeed, field surveyors often used photos of monuments and archaeological sites as materials for deeper — and sometimes, remote — study, explains Sudeshna Guha, professor of history and archaeology at the Shiv Nadar University and curator of 'Histories in the Making: Photographing Indian Monuments 1855 ̶ 1920' — an ongoing photography exhibition at the DAG in Delhi. Alexander Cunningham and James Fergusson wrote their books in England, Guha adds.