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
Robert Hotz (1844–1923), a professional photographer with studios in Calcutta and Shimla, poses with his bulldog, a breed that had symbolized England since the 1700s. Many British people came with or imported dogs to India. The British relied on their Indian servants to walk, feed, and care for the animals. Before the British arrived, Indian people rarely kept dogs as pets. Historically, in Indian art, dogs and jackals were associated with cremation grounds and were not folded into scenes of domestic life.
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Mrs. and Miss Lyall, Shimla
Sir Auckland Colvin and Family, Shimla
His Honor The Lieutenant Governor of the Punjab and Party, S
Fancy Group, Indore I
His Eminence Commander in Chief and Party, Shimla
Colonel F. G. Oldham, Shimla
Colonel H.R. Thuillier and His Wife Emmeline Williams Thuill
Viceregal Party Shimla (verso)
Group Taken at Nortekande Bungalow
Unknown — [Snapshot: Dog and Man]
Verry Fils — Grand Duke Constantine and Son
Pierre-Louis Pierson — Les Chiens
Unknown — [My Arab "Antelope"]
Louis Pierre Théophile Dubois de Nehaut (Belgian, 1799–1872)
Thomas Eakins — William J. Crowell with Ella
Franz Antoine — [Group Portrait of Six People]
Marie-Blanche Hennelle Fournier — The Madame B Album
Unknown — [Captain Stuart and the horse 'Tortoiseshell']
Roger Fenton (British, 1819–1869) — Lord Burghersh, Earl of
Franz Antoine — [Group Portrait of the Antoine and Häuserman