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Elizabeth Gwillim (bird artist)

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Lady
Elizabeth Gwillim
Born1763
Died21 December 1807, age 44
Resting placeSt. Mary's Church, Madras, India
NationalityBritish
Known forWatercolours of Indian birds
SpouseSir Henry Gwillim

Lady Elizabeth Symonds Gwillim (21 April 1763 – 21 December 1807) was an artist married to Sir Henry Gwillim, Puisne Judge[1] at the Madras high court until 1808. Lady Gwillim painted a series of about 200 watercolours of Indian birds. Produced about 20 years before John James Audubon, her work has been acclaimed for its accuracy and natural postures as they were drawn from observations of the birds in life. She also painted fishes and flowers.

Gwillim was born in the valley of Wye, Hereford, daughter of Hester and Thomas Symonds. She married the Hereford lawyer Henry Gwillim who was knighted in 1801. Along with her sister Mary Symonds, two clerks and two servants, the family moved to Madras. Apart from her bird paintings she is known for her letters (now in the British Library) which describe contemporary Indian culture including detailed descriptions of the devadasis and their role in society.[2] She died on 21 December 1807 of unknown causes and was buried at St. Mary's Church in Madras. Her husband resigned the next year and returned to England with the paintings.[3][4][5]

About 121 paintings from were obtained from a private dealer by Casey A. Wood and these are held in the Blacker-Wood Library of McGill University.

References

  1. ^ Prinsep, Charles C. (1885). Record of services of the Honourable East India Company's Civil Servants in the Madras Presidency. London: Trubner and Co. p. 34.
  2. ^ Spear, Jeffrey (2000). "Gods and Dancing Girls: A Letter from 1802 Madras". The Wordsworth Circle. 31 (3): 142–149.
  3. ^ Wood, Casey A. (1925). "Lady [Elizabeth] Gwillim—Artist and Ornithologist". Ibis. 67 (3): 594–599. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1925.tb02943.x.
  4. ^ Subramanya, S. (1994). "Paintings of Indian birds by Lady Elizabeth Gwillim at McGill University, Canada". Newsletter for Birdwatchers. 34 (4): 74–76.
  5. ^ Wood, Casey A. (1927). "Lady [Elizabeth] Gwillim. Artist and ornithologist". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 31 (2): 486–489.