Geoff Quilley's British Art and the East India Company is a major new publication which analyses in
thorough, scholarly detail the role of the British East India Company in the production and sponsorship of new, commercial art forms in late-eighteenth and early- to mid-nineteenth century British culture. The focus of the study, however, is certainly not narrow and Quilley's research will be of substantial interest to all those who are interested in the cultural encounter between Britain and Asia in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries much more widely, especially in terms of visual representation.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES
Quilley makes another major contribution to scholars' understanding of art and empire. The study offers productive ways to meld polite and commercial narratives with the growing literature on slavery, exploration, and empire.
JOURNAL OF BRITISH STUDIES