Multan Pottery, Punjab
About this artwork
Fred Bremner has arranged this composition in such a way as to foreground the distinctive hand-painted blue pottery which is still being made in Multan today. The pottery is shown at various stages of production allowing the viewer to get a sense of the processes involved. Bremner produced several images of Indian artisans at work. Such images satisfied the huge interest in the subcontinent that had been fuelled by the International Exhibitions of London (1886) and Glasgow (1888). Often sold as postcards the pictures were popular with Victorian Britains as they brought them closer to 'that far off land known as the Indian Empire'.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Fred BremnerScottish (1863 - 1941)
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title:Multan Pottery, Punjab
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date created:About 1902
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materials:Platinum/palladium print
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measurements:25.10 x 30.10 cm (image size 24.40 x 29.20 cm)
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased 1987
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accession number:PGP 129.19
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gallery:
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subject:
Fred Bremner
Fred Bremner
Fred Bremner, the son of a professional photographer in Banff, travelled to India in 1882 and worked there for nearly forty years. He moved all the time, covering vast distances to photograph colonial officers and their families as well as members of the native aristocracy. Bremner was fascinated...