Displaying Empire

Britain's visual encounter in India

The East India Company began as a mercantile corporation, chartered by Queen Elizabeth in 1600, to expand mercantile trade in commodities such as spices, cotton, tea, and silk. By the eighteenth century, the Company became a militarized governing presence driven by resource extraction. The Company’s stronghold in India attracted professional and amateur British artists, some of whom were part of its military and administrative network. Others, seeking to further their careers, traveled in India extensively, often relying on the support of local experts to record their impressions.

Map of British India

The Company’s extensive cartographic surveys of India were initially produced through labor intensive means, requiring numerous assistants and local aides for measuring and moving instruments across a diverse terrain. With technical advancements, maps offered greater precision in delineating natural features, land- and sea-based trade routes, and infrastructure.

This hand-colored map reproduces a plate for an Atlas featuring the “Geographical, Political, Commercial & Statistical” history of the world, edited by statistician Robert Montogomery Martin, who compiled administrative data on British colonies. Vignettes of the ethnic population of Baluchis, a Mughal royal procession, the city of Lahore, and the Qutb Minar at Delhi, situate its wide-ranging geographic and cultural parameters. Colored boundaries indicate three major “Presidencies,” administrative divisions, military cantonments, and civil stations. Rapkin used a dark hatching for proposed railways that, within a decade, would become reality, connecting major cities of the subcontinent.

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About Art History 395, and the curating of this exhibit

The term “Company Painting” has come to stand in for works produced by artists associated with the East India Company over the course of the consolidation of the British Empire in India from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. Works in this broad category range from depictions of customs and occupations, natural history subjects, and topographical paintings embodying the complex visual processes that shaped Britain’s reimagination of India as an extension of its empire.

This Winter Quarter 2026 museum seminar focused on a cache of Company-associated paintings, prints, and illustrated books in Northwestern’s Charles Deering McCormick Library of Special Collections and University Archives. Students conducted individual and collaborative research through the direct study of selected works and their colonial and art historical contexts; they also gained exposure to techniques of painting and print making and conservation science methods through the participation of the Library’s curators and conservators, as well as through colleagues at the Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts. The seminar involved a combination of independent research and collaborative work. Culminating in a physical exhibit at the Library, this course offered students the opportunity to write wall texts and labels, design object placement, and contribute to a digital companion site featuring their research on the works.

Yuthika Sharma Assistant Professor, Department of Art History The physical exhibit will be on display in Northwestern's Main Library April 2 - June 13, 2026

Acknowledgments

This exhibit was curated by students in Art History 395: Divya Chandrasekaran, Louis Chavey, Muyang Chen, Bela Filstrup, Joseph Gonsalves, Sojourner Hunt, Anna Ikle-Maizlish, Ashley Kim, Vicky Wang, Amelia Wilson, and Yuetong (Alysa) Xia working with Assistant Professor Yuthika Sharma.

Design and digital production were led by Mat Jordan and Basia Kapolka using the Canopy IIIF platform. Research support and instructional services were provided by Jason Nargis and Scott Krafft.

Special thanks to Northwestern University Libraries and the Department of Art History.

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