Wed, 23 May
In Focus       Arts and Culture       Environment       Government   
LALBAGH'S BOTANICAL TREASURE FOUND

Century old botanical illustrations rediscovered, restored

The nineteenth century paintings and sketches lost to neglect have now been painstakingly restored. If government machinery works fast enough public might get a glimpse of it soon.

By Poornima Dasharathi

The Department of Horticulture, Lalbagh, and Bangalore Environment Trust have recently restored and catalogued a total of 1020 rare botanical paintings - water colour illustrations, pencil sketches, ink drawings and lithographic prints - drawn by several artists in the late nineteenth century between 1887 and 1949. The drawings had been created in an effort to document plants, trees and fruits found in or considered important for the Mysore Kingdom.

Illustration of Gloriosa Superba from the lily family. Source: Botanical Illustrations Collection at Lalbagh

The old drawings had weathered, faded and were attacked by silverfish. These have been now restored, scanned, catalogued and published in three volumes - two volumes of watercolour illustrations and a third is pencil sketches.

The complete restoration and cataloguing of the paintings was done with the help of ARCH (Archival Resources for Contemporary History), an archival consultancy service of Srishti School of Arts, Design & Technology.

Painting of Guizotia Abyssinica or the niger seeds. Ucchellu in Kannada. Source: Botanical Illustrations Collection at Lalbagh

"There are plans to exhibit these paintings", revealed Dr S Aswath, the Joint Director, Department of Horticulture. "We are also planning an exhibition for botanical art sometime next year", he further stated.

Though the horticulture department did not mention, the published book attributes the finding and restoration process to Vijay Thiruvady, trustee of Bangalore Environment Trust(BET). It states that BET had initiated the talks on its revival and had been entrusted with the responsibility for this task.

When contacted, Thiruvady said that the project has been one of the several recommendations of BET to the horticulture department. Its other recommendations that are in the pipeline are

  • Permanent exhibition of some of the framed paintings in a hall in Lalbagh. These paintings can be rotated periodically for display and the rest can be stored in a temperature and humidity controlled environment.
  • The scanned copies to be used for all practical work while the original should be stored professionally as stated above. The three volumes should be kept for permanent sale.
  • These books along with a book on Lalbagh should be published and displayed for sale during the international conference on botanical art.
  • A book on Indian botanical art that includes works from other horticulture centres such as Calcutta should be prepared.

Currently BET is assisting the horticulture department on some of them. The paintings are currently stored in a few wooden cupboards and when i went to have a look, a professional photographer had arrived to photograph some illustrations with studio light setting! The harsh lights could undo all the work done so far. Clearly, the most  urgent task is to create a suitable environment to store these illustrations.

Mangifera Indica or the Mango. Source: Botanical Illustrations Collection at Lalbagh

History of these botanical Illustrations

In 1799, Benjamin Hayne took charge of the gardens under the order of Lord Wellesley. Dr Heyne was a naturalist and a medical officer with the Topographical survey of Mysore. During the surveys, economic, demographic, botanical, geographical and cultural data had been collected.

Botanical data was given particular importance as Wellesley himself had instructed Heyne to take charge of the Sultan's Cypress Gardens and stressed that it should be turned into a botanical garden and developed "as a depository of useful plants sent from different parts of the country".

Botanical illustrations became very important with the publication of systems of botanical nomenclature in the eighteenth century. Heyne was naturally keen in training ‘native' artists in identifying and illustrating characteristics of plants. Though none of the paintings of his period have survived, the illustrations commissioned by John Cameron, the Superindent of Lalbagh from 1874 to 1908 have survived.

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