flipflop wrote:I mean show me a better title page anywhere in the literary world...?
Cheers
flipflop wrote:Beautiful. I've a long held interest in Litho, ever since I specialized in it at art college. It's such a unique medium, nothing else looks like it.
Sketches in Afghaunistan by James Atkinson is a book I'd love to own, but you're talking ££££.
These are great, thanks for sharing
Cheers
flipflop wrote: ever since I specialized in it at art college.
Cheers
rickshaw92 wrote:
Art collage. Dude, WTF?
vagabond wrote:flipflop wrote:Beautiful. I've a long held interest in Litho, ever since I specialized in it at art college. It's such a unique medium, nothing else looks like it.
Sketches in Afghaunistan by James Atkinson is a book I'd love to own, but you're talking ££££.
These are great, thanks for sharing
Cheers
No worries. Figured there might be some interest here.
--
I'm sure an original of the Atkinson book might be megabucks (megapounds) but looks like there are print editions for $20-30 US. Not sure of the quality but might worth checking into:
http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=4234962080&searchurl=an%3Datkinson%252C%2Bjames%26kn%3Dsketches%26x%3D0%26y%3D0
http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=4940707289&searchurl=an%3Datkinson%252C%2Bjames%26kn%3Dsketches%26x%3D0%26y%3D0
http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=1786830104&searchurl=an%3Datkinson%252C%2Bjames%26kn%3Dsketches%26x%3D0%26y%3D0
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/afghan-expedition-notes-and-sketches-from-the-first-british-afghan-war-of-1839-1840-james-atkinson/1012775206
Looks like you can also get reproductionss here: http://www.1st-art-gallery.com/%28after%29-Atkinson,-James/%28after%29-Atkinson,-James-oil-paintings.html
And prints here: http://www.grosvenorprints.com/stock.php?WADbSearch1=Submit&search=subject&subject=Views%20OS&subject2=Asia
flipflop wrote:
I've got a copy of that already, it's the book of lithographs itself I meant, the original plates could be bought for a few grand in good condition, that was a good few years ago mind.
The book of expedition notes is a fine read in its own right (this one in your quote above)
Here's my own copy
Cheers
James Atkinson, doctor, journalist and artist of the Afghan Campaign, became superintendent of the Government Gazette in 1818, and of the Press from 1823. In 1833, he became surgeon to the 55th native Infantry and between 1838 and 1841 served in Kabul. The present sketches are original drawings made by Atkinson on the spot and relate to his publications Sketches in Afghanistan and The Expedition into Afghanistan. The drawings are inscribed with references to the artist’s journal, and the artist’s notes explain where in his planned publication the various illustrations should appear. Clearly Atkinson intended many more drawings to be published than in fact appeared. His sketches in fact contain 25 drawings plus the original frontispiece (the original drawing for which is in this collection); 16 of the remaining original drawings are in the India Office Library. At the time when Atkinson was travelling Afghanistan was a little-known country. Atkinson took drawing lessons from the artist George Chinnery. He probably first met Chinnery in 1805 when he was appointed assistant surgeon at Backergunge, to the south of Dhaka, soon after Chinnery was in Dhaka from 1808. His wife became a student of the artist and Atkinson himself is known to have executed a number of copies after Chinnery in addition to his own original watercolours.
flipflop wrote:He bugged out from Kabul just before the Afghans started gutting the British like fish. The warnings were already there in Atkinson's tale of the initial march into the country by the Army of the Indus. Anyone from the column even going for a slash in the bushes was likely to get dragged away and sliced up. The sheer hatred and ferocity of the locals was laughed away - who could beat an army as grand as this one? Successes at Ghazni and Kandahar swelled heads even further; finally, the going firm in Kabul was lacksadaisical, with the armoury & QM stores built outside the main cantonment, the latter overlooked by many of Kabul's hills, and the Afghans bided their time. When they brought artillery pieces to bear on the stunned British, it was game over. Traditional Afghan treachery did the rest and we got our asses kicked all the way to Jalallabad.
flipflop wrote:This is the best account I've read, by a direct descendant of Major Eldred Pottinger, the 'Hero of Herat'. He was an Ulsterman, so no bullshitting, they don't make men like this anymore.
http://www.amazon.com/Afghan-Connection-Extraordinary-Adventures-Pottinger/dp/0707302862
flipflop wrote:Another account, by the Scottish political agent Alexander Burnes. 'Bokhara Burnes' was a bit of a boy, and his 'swordplay' with the dusky beauties of Kabul was a big reason why the locals wanted the British dead.
He wrote about his time between 1836-38, when he was in Kabul intriguing with Dost Mohammed, whose son Akbhar Khan defeated the British in 1842. He remained calm under attack, but was chopped up early in the Kabul uprising.
http://books.google.co.uk/books/about/Cabool.html?id=UThCAAAAcAAJ&redir_esc=y
flipflop wrote:As for parallels with today, I wouldn't know about that. I spent two years in the bubble of Kabul, where nothing resembles the rest of the country. I visited everywhere except down south where the Brits are now finding it hard going. If anything has remained the same it's probably the Afghan character - tough, hard people. They are definitely not like Arabs.
However, I'm waiting out on word of a deployment to Kandahar, which hopefully should happen very soon - I'm looking forward to finally getting down south, and I'm 90% sure this gig is going to happen. Fingers crossed, I've got my Afghan mojo back for sure.
flipflop wrote:What's your own history?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 28 guests