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Old 3rd February 2016, 04:58 PM   #34
estcrh
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Join Date: Jun 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ariel
Perhaps. But he could witness events of 1872 no better than those of 1858: he wasn't there for either:-)
I believe that Vereshchagin responded to this by stating that British tactics (tying captives to cannon and executing them in this vicious manner) would have happened whether he actually saw it or not. In other words he was just using this particular painting as an way to bring attention to what he saw as the brutality of British justice in India, he did the same with his painting depicting the execution of members of the Nihilist movement in St Petersburg, political commentary is not always about realism, it is about making people think.
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