),
Bhawani Das or follower, 1777–82, from Mary Impey's album of natural history paintings Large-scale patrons included Colonel
James Skinner of Skinner's Horse fame, who had a
Rajput mother, and for natural history paintings,
Mary Impey, wife of
Elijah Impey, who commissioned over three hundred for the
Impey Album, and the
Marquess Wellesley, brother of the
first Duke of Wellington, who had over 2,500. There were equivalent movements, but much smaller, around the French and Portuguese possessions in India, and in other South Asian areas like
Burma and
Ceylon. The French-born Major-General
Claude Martin (1735–1800), latterly based in
Lucknow, commissioned 658 paintings of birds, including
Black Stork in a Landscape, now in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Some notable artists include
Mazhar Ali Khan, who worked on Thomas Metcalfe's
Delhi Book, and was part of a dynasty of miniature artists, the patriarch of which,
Ghulam Ali Khan, had worked for
William Fraser on a similar commission known as the
Fraser Album, with over 90 paintings and drawings, mostly painted in 1815 to 1819. The Fraser Album came to light in Fraser's papers only in 1979; they are now dispersed. Mazhar Ali Khan, like his uncle
Ghulam Murtaza Khan, also painted portraits of the last Mughal emperors and their courts. The art historians
Mildred Archer and Toby Falk, say of the Fraser Album: "Although we can never know for certain who painted each Fraser picture, we can be sure on stylistic grounds that they are the work of a single family, that of Ghulam Ali Khan. Although the finest figure drawings among the Fraser pictures are technically superior to known portraits signed by Ghulam Ali Khan, those of the Gurkhas, the recruits, and some of the single figures such as Kala and Umeechund must be by another member of his family". The
Delhi Book or
Reminiscences of Imperial Delhi is an album including 120 paintings in Company style, commissioned in 1844 by
Sir Thomas Metcalfe, the Company's Agent at the Mughal court after the murder of Fraser in 1835. Most are by
Mazhar Ali Khan, and show the final years of the Delhi court, as well as local monuments. The book is now in the
British Library in London. ==Material==