Keywords: Departure for the Hunt.jpg en Departure for the Hunt c 1885 a Rajasthani court scene by Edwin Lord Weeks Source http //www christies com/LotFinder/search/LotDetail asp sid intObjectID 3806732 SE CMWCAT02+606+1839305360+ QR M+1+284+Aqc0000900+581++Aqc0000900+ entry india SU 1 RQ True AN 285 downloaded Oct 2001 Edwin Lord Weeks American 1849-1903 Departure for the Hunt Signed 'E L Weeks' and stamped with the artist's moghul device lower left Oil on canvas 37½ x 27¼ in 95 3 x 69 3 cm Lot Notes Executed circa 1885 The Departure for the Hunt is an outstanding example of Weeks' Indian oeuvre and represents a return to a familiar theme among his depictions of life in the Rajput princely courts of India This painting depicts the gathering of a hunting party consisting of regal personages servants horses and a trained cheetah in the forecourt of a palace The casual scene and Weeks clearly depicts it as such is framed by a precise rendering of a red sandstone gate pavilion and stables with a tantalizing glimpse of the white marble palace in the background The red sandstone and white plaster walls and wood details are characteristic of north or north central India and suggest that the painting is set in a Rajahstani city such as Jodhpore or Jaipur Weeks produced at least two other notable versions of this subject each altogether different in its setting and characterization The Rajah Starting on a Hunt Metropolitan Museum of Art of similar size to the present painting also features a princely figure on horseback with a cheetah within a palatial courtyard The other entitled Start for the Hunt at Gwalior Private Collection larger than the other two depicts mounted princely figures with following attendants en route to the hunt through a city street In each case for Weeks the anticipation of the hunt was a more interesting subject than the hunt itself as the preparation afforded the opportunity to depict both figures and animals in an evocative architectural backdrop Weeks' extraordinary talent for the naturalistic depiction of animals figures and architecture is clearly evident in the present work and remains largely incomparable among the Orientalist painters of his day His virtuosity and keen eye for detail is balanced by a painterly suggestiveness which sets Weeks apart from the brittle academicism of many of his contemporaries In the present painting these qualities draw the eye from place to place throughout the composition Thus Weeks allows the various elements of the painting to compete for our visual attention while still maintaining a tight and precise compositional structure Relieving all of the opulent detail is a broad expanse of cloudless cobalt sky as the entire scene is depicted as lit by brilliant sunshine relieved by cool shadows thrown across the walls and colonnades As with so much of Weeks' work while every building is accurately drawn and every surface of wall garment and animal is richly rendered Weeks' painterly suggestiveness of detail elevates the present painting above mere pedantic academicism as it depicts the visual richness of life in the Rajput courts 1885 http //www columbia edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00routesdata/1400_1499/rajputforts/hunting/hunting html Creator Edwin Lord Weeks PD-old-100 Uploaded with UploadWizard Paintings of courtyards and patios Hunting by cheetah Orientalist paintings |