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Journal of the History of Collections Advance Access originally published online on April 26, 2007
Journal of the History of Collections 2008 20(1):127-142; doi:10.1093/jhc/fhm017
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

Anthropology, fine art and missionaries

The Berndt Kalighat album rediscovered

Kate Brittlebank


   Abstract

In the early 1960s, the Australian anthropologist, Ronald M. Berndt, purchased a Victorian album containing forty-four Kalighat paintings from Bengal. The attraction of the album for Ronald and his wife Catherine, also an anthropologist, is examined here in the context of their work on Aboriginal Australia, revealing links between their public life and their personal collecting activities. The second part of the paper reconstructs the album's life history, prior to its acquisition by the Berndts. Owned previously by the artist Sir Hans Heysen, the album is shown to have been collected by the Australian Baptist Church's earliest missionaries to India. At the centre of the ownership of the paintings, from the time of their collection, lies their iconographic imagery: idolatrous to the eyes of the Christian missionaries, visually appealing to the artist and embodying rich religious and mythological meaning for the anthropologists.


Address for correspondence Dr Kate Brittlebank, School of History & Classics, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 81, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia kate.brittlebank{at}utas.edu.au.


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