Femme en Grande Parure [Woman in Grand Attire] from Les Hindoûs

* Nearly 20,000 images of artworks the museum believes to be in the public domain are available to download on this site. Other images may be protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights. By using any of these images you agree to LACMA's Terms of Use.

Femme en Grande Parure [Woman in Grand Attire] from Les Hindoûs

Series: Les Hindoûs
France, Paris, 1808-1812
Prints; etchings
Colored etching
Image: 13 5/8 x 9 3/8 in. (34.61 x 23.81 cm); Sheet: 21 7/8 x 15 3/4 in. (55.56 x 40.01 cm)
Gift of Aruna and Ranjit Roy (M.2001.210.3)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

François Balthazar Solvyns (1760-1824) was a Flemish marine painter and printmaker....
François Balthazar Solvyns (1760-1824) was a Flemish marine painter and printmaker. He lived in Kolkata (Calcutta) in 1791-1803, where he made ethnographic drawings and etchings of the occupations, modes of transportation, festivals, and customs of Bengali life and society. He published some 250 etchings in A Collection of Two Hundred and Fifty Coloured Etchings: Descriptive of the Manners, Customs and Dresses of the Hindoos, printed in Calcutta in 1796. After returning to Europe in 1803, he reworked 288 of his etchings for a bilingual French/English edition, Les Hindoûs, 4 vols., which was published in Paris in 1808-1812. In this colored etching from Les Hindoûs (Vol 2, Pl. 11), a wealthy Hindu woman dressed in her full finery with copious jewelry sits against an embroidered silk bolster in a room or verandah looking out into the garden. Her attendants fan her, offer her pan (betel-leaf quids), and tend her hookah. In the illustration’s accompanying text, Solvyns describes the woman’s seclusion and life of leisure while living in purdah (social isolation).
More...