Credit: © The Royal Society
Image number: RS.8455
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Red-tailed bamboo pit viper
Date
1872
Creator
Hurrish Chunder Khan (Indian) , Artist
Object type
Archive reference number
Material
Dimensions
height (painting): 343mm
width (painting): 401mm
width (painting): 401mm
Subject
Content object
Description
Herpetological study of a Red-tailed bamboo pit viper, Trimeresurus erythrurus, here referred to as Trimeresurus carinatus. Viewed from above, with full body depicted at life size and three sketched details showing scalation of the head and body, and the fangs. Details of specimen size provided.
Inscribed in ink: ‘TRIMERESURUS CARINATUS/ specimen in Indian Musuem/ No./ Length 3. Circum 4./ Drawn by Hurrish Chunder Khan, Student. Govt. Sch: of Art Calcutta’ with further pencil annotation ‘Query herein numbers 13/ Plate 17’. Pencil annotations believed to be in Joseph Fayrer’s hand.
From MS/628, a set of paintings and drawings executed by students of the Government School of Art, Kolkata, for Joseph Fayrer’s The Thanatophidia of India. Later published as the lower specimen on plate 13 of this text.
Hurrish Chunder Khan, student at the Government School of Art, Kolkata.
Sir Joseph Fayrer, first baronet, (1824-1907), surgeon and author, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1877. Fayrer worked in India between 1850 and 1872 and is best known for The Thanatophidia of India, a study of venomous snakes, illustrated by members of the Kolkata School of Art and published by the colonial government.
Inscribed in ink: ‘TRIMERESURUS CARINATUS/ specimen in Indian Musuem/ No./ Length 3. Circum 4./ Drawn by Hurrish Chunder Khan, Student. Govt. Sch: of Art Calcutta’ with further pencil annotation ‘Query herein numbers 13/ Plate 17’. Pencil annotations believed to be in Joseph Fayrer’s hand.
From MS/628, a set of paintings and drawings executed by students of the Government School of Art, Kolkata, for Joseph Fayrer’s The Thanatophidia of India. Later published as the lower specimen on plate 13 of this text.
Hurrish Chunder Khan, student at the Government School of Art, Kolkata.
Sir Joseph Fayrer, first baronet, (1824-1907), surgeon and author, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1877. Fayrer worked in India between 1850 and 1872 and is best known for The Thanatophidia of India, a study of venomous snakes, illustrated by members of the Kolkata School of Art and published by the colonial government.
Object history
These artworks were presented to the Royal Society on 8 January 1874 by Joseph Fayrer and acknowledged at a meeting of Council: ‘Read a letter from Dr. Fayrer, offering his collection of original drawings of the Poisonous Snakes of India to the Royal Society. Resolved - That Dr. Fayrer’s offer be accepted, and that the best thanks of the President and Council be returned to him for his gift.’ [Royal Society Minutes of Council, Printed, vol. 4, 1870-1877, p.204, 15 January 1874.]
Related fellows
Joseph Fayrer (1824 - 1907, British) , Surgeon
Associated place