Interior of the Motee Musjid, Agra (India)
Interior of the Motee Musjid, Agra (India)
Artist
Samuel Bourne
British, 1834-1912
Date1865
Dimensions9 x 11 1/8 in. (22.9 x 28.2 cm)
MediumAlbumen print
ClassificationPhotographs
Credit LinePurchased with funds given by an anonymous donor
Object number
1986.4
Not on View
Collections
Exhibition HistoryToledo Museum of Art, Refraction/Reflection, April 20-September 2, 2012.Label TextSamuel Bourne began making photographic images of India in 1863 after establishing his credentials in Great Britain where he lectured on photography and wrote technical articles for photographic journals. In India he established a studio with the master photographic printer Charles Shepherd that did commercial work while marketing Bourne’s landscape and architectural studies. Bourne’s success in the 1860s and the continued admiration for his work today are partly due to the luminescent quality of his prints. This ‘luminescence’ could have easily been lost during printing, therefore credit for Bourne’s popularity must also be given to Shepherd’s excellent technical skills. The Motee Musjid (or Moti Masjid) was built between 1648 and 1654 by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, who also commissioned the Taj Mahal. Built of light-reflective white marble (in the local language Moti means pearl), the Moti Masjid was a natural subject for Bourne’s camera.- Works on Paper
Giorgio Sommer
mid 19th-early 20th Century
19th century, possibly 1849-1855
Carlo Naya
about 1860 ?
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