Ancient Excavations at Carli
1809
Original hand-coloured aquatint on paper
Without mount: 19 x 25 in (48 x 62.5 cm)
With mount: 26 x 32 in (66 x 81.3 cm)
"This aquatint is taken from plate 14 of Henry Salt's 'Twenty Four Views in St. Helena, the Cape, India, Ceylon, the Red Sea, Abyssinia and Egypt', and shows the great Buddhist Chaitya (hall of worship) at Karli (Karle). Dating from some time between the second century BC and the first century AD, the Karli caves are in the Poona district of Maharashtra, and this chaitya is the largest rock-cut cave in India. Explorer and earl, George Annesley described the carvings and entrance screens as greatly damaged by human hand, but was much impressed by the grandeur of the huge arched roof. The cave is also distinguished by the entrance pillar, which is 24 feet high and eight feet in diameter, with a summit carving of four lions". (Source: British Library Board). Which represents national emblem of India.
This work will be shipped mounted.
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