Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Kalighat paintings reflect the time and context in which they were created. Kalighat painters used their medium to offer penetrating and insightful critiques of British-influenced Indians as well as the British themselves through satires and caricatures. Newly rich Bengali native Indian clerks (babus) aspired to dress and behave like their British masters, and Kalighat painters taunted them for this. The maid, dressed in green, holds a hookah in her right hand. The lady in red is likely a fashionable high society concubine or prostitute known and depicted at this time as hookah-smoking, makeup-wearing, paan- (betel leaf with areca nut and lime paste) chewing hussies. The wealth created by the East India Company made it possible for Bengali babu dandies to have concubines and pay for prostitutes.
Be the first to share your thoughts.
Sign in to join the discussion.
Shri Gobinda Chandra Roy (Indian, active late 1800s) — Leaf
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Krishna Steals the Clothes of th
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Hanuman attacks Indrajit holding
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Woman Playing Music (recto); Kri
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Rama and Sita enthroned (recto);
Krishna with Radha and Two Attendants (recto); Jagannath, Su
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Jatayu hinders Ravana’s chariot,
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Parvati Placing a Wedding Garlan
Maid bringing a hookah to a lady (recto), from a Kalighat al
Winged Apsara with a Horn (recto); Jagannatha Trio (verso)
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Krishna as Kali worshipped by Ra
Krishna Standing by Radha who is Seated on a Chair