DOAJ Open Access 2025

Landscape Aesthetics of Remoteness in the Indian Himalayas

Bhoomika Joshi

Abstrak

This paper examines the pictorial practices of landscape painting in colonial British art and the textual practice of colonial travel writing to examine the landscape aesthetics of remoteness in the Indian Himalayas. It argues that neither the ‘picturesque’ nor the ‘sublime’ genre of colonial landscape paintings can describe the representation of the marginalised geographies of the Indian Himalayas and the colonial impetus to engineer them. By offering a paradigm of the landscape aesthetics of remoteness, this paper demonstrates how remoteness is aesthetically reproduced in the colonial visual imagination, which informs the mapping, engineering and transformation of the Himalayan landscape. It examines the landscape aesthetics in the travelogue and its accompanying illustrations of aquatints in the works of James B. Fraser (1820a, b) and of the lithographs and accompanying text in the work of Thomas Daniell (c.1800) for the North-Western Himalayan region in India. The paper situates these representations of colonial landscape paintings in a broader study of ‘landscape and power’ (Mitchell 1994). It analyses the pictorial and textual practices through the dialectic of the ‘interior’ and the ‘frontier’ that produces the landscape aesthetic of remoteness and provides a new paradigm for studying landscapes and their representation.

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Bhoomika Joshi

Format Sitasi

Joshi, B. (2025). Landscape Aesthetics of Remoteness in the Indian Himalayas. https://doi.org/10.2218/himalaya.2025.9589

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2025
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.2218/himalaya.2025.9589
Akses
Open Access ✓