Posted on: 13 January 2013

Sculptured Elephant and Pillar, Kailas. Caves of Ellora.
By William Simpson - 1866

William Simpson was born on 28 October 1823 in Glasgow. Following a seven-year apprenticeship with a specialist lithographic firm, he moved to London in February 1851 and found employment with Day and Sons. In 1859 the firm commissioned Simpson to visit India and make drawings for a book illustrating well-known places associated with the 1857-58 uprising. Thus began Simpson's long association with India, and the first of his four visits to the subcontinent over the next twenty-five years. During these journeys he made numerous rapid pencil drawings in sketchbooks, often heightened with colour washes. Many formed preparatory studies for his finished watercolours, most of which he worked up after returning to London. The plan was for Day and Son to select 250 of these finished watercolours to be lithographed as illustrations in the projected volume. While Simpson was away in India, however, Day and Son had been drifting into debt. In 1867, before it finally went into liquidation at the end of the year, he was made a company shareholder as part payment. But, as he expressed it, 'the great work on India, on which I bestowed so much time and labour, never came into existence'. Two years later, Simpson's collection of 250 watercolours was sold off as bankrupt stock: 'This was the big disaster of my life', as he ruefully remarked. This painting depicts the sculpted elephant and pillar in the Kailasa Temple at Ellora, a site celebrated for its three successive groups of Buddhist, Hindu and Jain cave temples. The Kailasa Temple complex was begun in the mid-8th century and represents the climax of the rock-cut phase of Indian architecture.


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gorgeous

Excellent..!

Where are they now :~

great

marvellous

I visited in '71 - knowing nothing but all the more impressionable - Ellora though ancient - was timeless - gave a strong sense of deja vu.

Supet like

I go there everyday still after 800 visits the place amazes me nice to see how the site was in 1800's thanx for the pic