MY friend Charles Greig is a distinguished British art historian and scholar. He grew up in colonial Africa but attended school and university in England. After graduation, he joined the fine art auctioneers, Christies in London. Since 1984 he has worked as an independent art consultant and scholar specialising in particular on paintings of the Indian subcontinent by 18th and 19th century European and Company School artists. In 1985, he partnered with Giles Eyre, another period art specialist, who was also a close friend of the notable Archer’s, John and Mildred.
Greig has been responsible for the formation of a number of impressive private collections both in Britain and India. One such important collection includes that of Daylesford House, Gloucestershire, England — the house formerly owned by the Governor-General of British India, Warren Hastings. During the last few years he has been seriously researching the works of Johann Zoffany (1733-1810) done in colonial India and in the West. A major exhibition of Zoffany opened at the Yale Centre for British Art, USA, in October 2011 and, then moved on to The Royal Academy in London, UK in March, 2012. For the first time ever, two paintings done in Dhaka in 1787 by Zoffany were given pride of place at the London exhibit, displayed side by side as pendants with Dhaka, Bangladesh prominently mentioned because of the initiative of Greig. To date, these two extraordinary Zoffany’s are the earliest known paintings of Dhaka done by a European artist. This recent ‘discovery’ created a sensation in the art circles in the West and enhanced the market price of the paintings manifold.
The two historical edifices in Dhaka painted in 1787 by Zoffany include the Lalbagh South Gate and Colombo Sahib’s mausoleum at Narinda cemetery. The Dhaka paintings are termed as landscapes by art academics. The ‘Nagaphon Ghat’ was first identified by Greig in 2011, based on a comparison of the figures in the painting with other figures in various Indian paintings by Zoffany, the figure representations being identical. Secondly, by comparing the moonlight in this painting with the delineation of the moonlight and sky in another Zoffany painting ‘The Last Supper’ in St. John’s Church, Calcutta and thirdly, by the brushwork and technical brilliance of the painting.