20th May, 2026 11:00

Live Sale: Indian, Islamic, Himalayan and South-East Asian Art 2026

 
Lot 37
 

37

A DEPICTION OF THE FORT OF KOPPAL FORT, KARNATAKA, INDIA, LATE 18TH CENTURY

in watercolour and ink on paper, inscribed upper right with a list of annotations, further inscribed below 'Fort of Copoole', image 30.5 x 46.5cm., framed and glazed

This depiction of the fort is by an amateur hand, most probably a soldier-artist who made it in preparation of an attack. The annotations note where the intended breach of the fort's wall is to take place. The fort was embellished in 17th century when it was within the territories of Ibrahim Adil Shah II of Bijapur. In the later 18th century it came into the possession of the Maratha leader, Shivaji, only to be captured shortly afterwards by Haidar Ali. His son, Tipu Sultan, added to the fortifications until it came under siege in 1790-91, from when this sketch dates, by the forces of Britain's ally, the Nizam of Hyderabad, with support of troops from the East india Company. In the nineteenth century, the fort became associated with rebellion against the British, first in 1819 and then again in 1857 leading to the British breaching the battlements to supress the rebels.

Sold for £1,800


 

in watercolour and ink on paper, inscribed upper right with a list of annotations, further inscribed below 'Fort of Copoole', image 30.5 x 46.5cm., framed and glazed

This depiction of the fort is by an amateur hand, most probably a soldier-artist who made it in preparation of an attack. The annotations note where the intended breach of the fort's wall is to take place. The fort was embellished in 17th century when it was within the territories of Ibrahim Adil Shah II of Bijapur. In the later 18th century it came into the possession of the Maratha leader, Shivaji, only to be captured shortly afterwards by Haidar Ali. His son, Tipu Sultan, added to the fortifications until it came under siege in 1790-91, from when this sketch dates, by the forces of Britain's ally, the Nizam of Hyderabad, with support of troops from the East india Company. In the nineteenth century, the fort became associated with rebellion against the British, first in 1819 and then again in 1857 leading to the British breaching the battlements to supress the rebels.

Auction: Live Sale: Indian, Islamic, Himalayan and South-East Asian Art 2026, 20th May, 2026

The sale includes the collection of Robert Skelton OBE, curator of Indian Art at the Victoria and Albert Museum.  It comprises some exquisite 18th and 19th century Indian paintings and drawings as well as a fine group of modern Indian paintings with works by Shiavax Chavda (1914 - 1990), Francis Newton Souza (1924 - 2002), K Laxma Goud (B. 1940) and Jayashree Chakravarty (B. 1956).  Tiles, Indian bronzes, thewa boxes, a silver gilt ewer, a ‘Koftgari’ pen box and a Mughal carved black jade dagger are also among the lots in this collection.

Also in the same sale is 10th -12th century Persian pottery, a monumental pair of 19th century doors, Persian and Syrian ceramics including tiles, also Iznic tiles from Ottoman Anatolia. Other lots include Indian bronze figures, small furniture, textiles and rugs.
 
Auction Location: London, UK
 
PUBLIC EXHIBITION
Sunday 17th May: 12pm to 4pm 
Monday 18th May: 10am to 5:30pm
Tuesday 19th May: 10am to 5pm
 
CONTACT
indianandislamic@olympiaauctions.com  + 44 (0)20 7806 5545
 
 

Viewing

PUBLIC EXHIBITION:

Sunday 17th May: 12pm to 4pm 
Monday 18th May: 10am to 5:30pm
Tuesday 19th May: 10am to 5pm

CONTACT
indianandislamic@olympiaauctions.com  + 44 (0)20 7806 5545

View all lots in this sale