| Andrew
Nicholl (1804-86): Belfast Artist in Colonial Ceylon
- Page 2 Article by Joe Simpson (Duncan,
BC, Canada)
Page 2
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(Above) Kandy Lake, central
Sri Lanka, 2002 - admired by Andrew Nicholl in
July 1848 |

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After Kandy, the travellers visited the historic
rock temple of Dambulla, before entering the
northern jungles that had until recently utterly
concealed Ceylon's ancient ruined cities - rather
like Cambodia's Angkor Wat.
Other sights that amazed Nicholl included devastated
giant "tanks" or artificial reservoirs
that had once sustained a thriving, but now
vanished civilizations. To everyone's amusement,
the expedition's doctor had brought along a
European-style lavatory seat, carried around
a porter's neck!
Nicholl was somehow reminded of St. Kevin's
Bed at Glendalough, when he saw one sacred mountain
with many steps to the summit.
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| (Above)
The incredible rigours of jungle travel in 19th
Century Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) |
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(Above) Part of the the ruined
ancient Sri Lankan city of Polonnaruwa, photographed
in the mid-1890s, looking very much as it would
have appeared in its wild jungle setting to the
artist Andrew Nicholl in the later 1840s. |
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| (Above
Left) The entrance to a ruined circular Buddhist
shrine ("vatadage") in Polonnaruwa,
again photographed in the mid-1890s, but in similar
condition to when Andrew Nicholl sketched it half
a century earlier. His later watercolour painting
of this scene now hangs in the Colombo National
Museum.
(Above Right) The very same spot today, no longer
overgrown by jungle as it was in Nicholl's time.
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At Anuradhapura, the
most ancient Sinhalese capital but by then a "poor,
mean village" in deep jungle, Nicholl parted
ways with Tennent and the others, who all headed
north-west for the coast and then south to Colombo.
After several days' happily sketching the ruined
temples and statues of the former royal city,
Nicholl took leave in late July of his kindly
host, District Judge Tranchill, and proceeded
south back towards Dambulla and Kandy, intending
from there to head south-west to Colombo.
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(Above)
The ancient Buddhist rock temple of Dambulla,
looking much the same in 2002 as it must have
done when visited by the two Belfast men Andrew
Nicholl and Sir James Emerson Tennent, just before
the July 1848 rebellion broke out in the surrounding
area. |
His only companions were a Sinhalese guide, a horse-keeper
and two porters (then called "coolies"). Three
miles before Dambulla, they met crowds of frightened
villagers fleeing into the jungle, who told them that
a rebel "king" had just been "crowned"
in the rock temple of Dambulla, and that his followers
were already "massacring" Europeans. (The
latter rumour, fortunately, was much exaggerated, but
Nicholl of course was not to know this at the time).
 (Above) Contemporary
depiction of a skirmish between government troops
and Sinhalese rebels during the brief uprising of
1848 |
Wisely, Nicholl turned back in
the direction he had just come, and took off as
fast as he could for Anuradhapura. On the way,
he learned to his great alarm that the new "king"
had sent out a search party to capture him.
After two gruelling days' constant travelling,
he arrived back at Judge Tranchill's house. From
there he left for the north-west coast, in the
footsteps of his erstwhile companions, and finally
returned, almost barefooted and "completely
exhausted" - yet still carrying his valuable
sketches strapped over his shoulder - to the safety
of Colombo on August 10th, where he awoke the
next day with a malaria or sunstroke-induced "jungle
fever" after dining the previous night with
Sir James Emerson Tennent and some British army
officers.
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In the meantime, he had received the chilling (if in
fact accurate) news by letter from Judge Tranchill that
a Tamil informant had told him about armed Sinhalese
rebels in the Dambulla area blocking the Kandy road
and asking about an English gentleman (Nicholl!) whom
they knew to be in the area, and whom they intended
"cut to pieces should he come that way".
It had been a narrow escape, and an unforgettable once-in-a-lifetime
adventure for the Belfast drawing master! To quote Andrew
Nicholl himself, writing in 1852: "Thus terminated
my sketching tour through the forests of Ceylon, the
most interesting I ever had in my life; and though attended
with both danger and fatigue, yet the enjoyment which
I derived from it far more than compensated for the
hardship of the journey, and will ever be considered
by me the most delightful of all my sketching excursions,
either at home or in distant lands."
The Ceylon 1848 rebellion, such as it was, was quickly
suppressed by the British forces, many thought afterwards
with needless ferocity, and a Parliamentary Enquiry
followed that effectively ended Sir James Emerson Tennent's
colonial career and any hopes that he might have entertained
about becoming Governor. Tennent died in 1869, after
a second career as a civil servant in London, and Nicholl
lived on until 1886, dying in London at the ripe old
age of 83, no doubt still dining out on his Ceylon experiences.
A large exhibition of his life's work was held the following
year in Belfast, at 55 Donegall Place, and in 1889 his
daughter Mary Anne presented 56 of his watercolours
of Ceylon plants and trees to Dublin's Royal Hibernian
Academy in memory of her father.
And, of course, the fond memory of the Northern Irish
boot-maker's son turned mid-Victorian landscape artist
extraordinary, lives on at the Sri Lankan National Museum
in Colombo. That Ulster History Circle blue plaque in
Church Lane was well-earned, for sure!
<<
return to page 1
| The author
wishes to thank Mr Palinda de Silva for
kindly permitting the use in this essay of some
19th century images of Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon)
from his personal collection. Readers of this article
are invited to visit Palinda's excellent website
at: www.imagesofceylon.com |
YOUR RESPONSES
MaryJane - Apr '07 Hi Joe ,
What a wonderful article and with stunning pictures too. I am the daughter of a burgher lady from Ceylon and funnily enough I was born in Northern Ireland(now living in England) My mother arrived in N.Ireland in about 1947 after a 2 year stay in England. It seems that N.Ireland and Ceylon have a lot of ties !! My mother was an Andree whose family had photographic studios in Galle, Matara, Jaffna and Colombo. I think Ismeth Raheem may know of this family. I would like to have contact with Ismeth and would ask you if you could kindly pass my email address on to him maryjane(underscoredash)oclAThotmailDOTcom please and thank you. I have read many of your very interesting and fascinating articles over the years. Do keep up the great work of keeping us all in touch with our SL roots.
MJ
Joe Simpson - Mar '07
Message for Terry Morahan - Hi, Terry, I don't have
a belfast contact telephone number for you, hence my
not calling you when I was last over there in Oct -
please email it to me at my office - tjslawATtelusDOTnet
- as my home computer is 'kaputski' just now. Next time
I go over, I'll definitely contact you, if I have your
number. Probably my next visit will be in the early
autumn '07. My dad is not doing so well health-wise
so it may be sooner. Regards, Joe S.
Terry Morahan - Feb '07
There are at least 6 portraits of Nicholl extant - pencil
drawings by Piccioni in the Ulster Museum ;see "Art
in Belfast 1760-1880 "by Eileen Black. You did
not call in October when you were over !! Cheers Terry
Terry Morahan - Feb '07
Thought you might have contacted me when you were over
in Belfast recently - anyhow re your request for Andrew
Nicholl likenesses - there are several of him - charcoal
drawings by Felix Piccioni; see Art in Belfast 1760-1880
by Eileen Black page 107 ; Irish Academic Press www.iap.ie
Cheers.
Madora Pereira - Nov '06
1. 1818 Irish man named captain O'Neill captured the
Singhales rebel leaders and later executed them.
2. 1848 there was a great Irish man named ....ELLIOT'
was in ceylon and helping the locals(1848Revolution)he
seems to be a jounarlist! British were damn against
him! Does any one know about this Character?
Srilal Fernando - Nov '06
Hi Joe, An excellent presentation as usual. I was made
aware of A N by Dr rajpal de Silva & admired his
skilled paintings.
Chaminda Weerawardhana - Sep '06
I am a Ceylonese/Sri Lankan postgraduate based in Tours,
central France. I know Ireland quite well, and my partner
comes from there. Reading through this wonderful piece
of writing, I was reminded of 1998, the 50th anniversary
year of Independence, when I visited the National Museum
in Colombo with my parents as a 16-year-old high schooler,
to be enthralled by AN's paintings of Ceylon. I wish
to note here that AN and Sir Tennent were not the only
Irishmen who played significant roles in British Ceylon,
and there are so many who have been unfortunately forgotten,
such as the Rev. Ireland Jones, who founded a school
in the Ceylonese hill country & called it 'Trinity
College'! My discipline is comparative political history
and I am currently working on the British Govt's democratization
ventures in her colonies (Ireland & Ceylon included).
I'll be pleased to hear of any Irish/Empire/comparative/Ceylonese
historians who are interested in unearthing the work
of forgotten Irishmen (& women) who served Ceylon.
My mail address is chami 82 @voila.fr
Joe Simpson - June '06
Message for Raymond O'Regan and/or Terry Morahan - genlemen,
many thanks for both your fascinating comments. I will
be back in Belfast area in Oct 2006 for 3 weeks from
my home here in BC, Canada - I would very much like
to meet up with you both, and also to put you in direct
touch with architect and art historian Ismeth Raheem
in Colombo, Sri Lanka, who is an Andrew Nicholl expert
so far as AN's brief time in Ceylon is concerned. Ismeth
knows Martyn Anglesea at the UM. Can contact me here
(home) at otesagaATshawDOTca or (work) tjslawATtelusDOTnet
- Kind Regards, Joe Simpson
Raymond o'Regan - May '06
What an excellent article on Andrew Nicholl. As a lecturer
in Irish History I am always amazed at the diaspora
of the Irish throughout the world.
Andrew Nicholls father was a shoemaker in Church Lane,
formally known as School House Lean because of the 1666
Latin School that was built there and paid for by the
Earl of Donegall.
Joe mentions James Emerson Tennant a man who has two
streets named after him on the Shankill Road i.e. Tennant
St. (formally Parliament St.) and Emerson St.
He had married the daughter of William Tennant, Merchant,
prominent United Irishman and member of the First Presbyterian
Church in Rosemary St. Emerson also adopted his father
in laws name into his own .
Most people remember Andrew Nichols painting of the
old long bridge that used to stride the Lagan from 1688
to 1844 and it gratifying to know of his exploits in
Ceylon.
Joe Simpson - Feb '06
Message for Terry Morahan:
Terry, many thanks for your comments, and for correcting
me on my assertion about Andrew Nicholl being "scarcely
remembered" today in N. Ireland. Truth to tell,
in late 2003 on my one and only visit to the Ulster
Museum since well before we moved to Canada from East
Anglia in the 1980s, the UM exhibition rooms were being
completely renovated and therefore all the display artwork
(including AN) was in storage!
Anyway, I would be delighted to view your collection
when next I revisit my home city, thanks. Terry, do
you know of anyone - e.g. in the Nicholl family today
- who might have a photo portrait of Andrew Nicholl?
Ismeth Raheem, a Colombo, Sri Lanka senior architect
and published art historian, is collecting material
on Nicholl in Ceylon, for a possible future book, and
would dearly like to find such an image.
Ismeth tells me that he has among his collection the
original pencil sketch book that Nicholl carried on
his back during his 1848 jungle adventures, which dovetails
with his account published in the Dublin University
Magazine of 1852. His Ulster-born patron & friend
Sir James EmersonTennent later borrowed it to send to
Longmans, publishers of Tennent's 1859 twin-volume "magnum
opus" on Ceylon, which includes engravings of many
of Nicholl's drawings of the island's ruined ancient
cities. According to Ismeth, Nicholl's family owned
this sketch book until the 1940s, when it was sold at
a London auction to a Ceylonese law student friend of
Ismeth's father. Ismeth then acquired it from that individual
or his family about 30 years ago.
Terry Morahan - Feb '06
I very much enjoyed your article - though it is an extreme
exaggeration to say he is " scarcely remembered
" here; there is a good selection of his paintings
on display in the Ulster Museum and his pictures are
competed for in the local auctions in which they frequently
surface ; re the reference to Turner influence - I have
a very " Turneresque " Nicholl in my possesion
and as they overlapped in London it is plausible that
they knew of each other - but have been unable to obtain
proof . You are welcome to see my paintings when you
next visit Belfast ; I have been trying to research
his Belfast contemporary - artist James Howard Burgess
( 1810 - 1880 ) - he IS neglected !! (And I think often
better than Nicholl !)
Emma Trehane
I have been reading through the comments here on Nicholl
and am interested to know if anyone has ever come across
the name Eliza Louisa or Thomas Emmerson of 20 Stratford
Place, London, in relation to this artist. Eliza Emmerson
a good friend of the Poet John Clare and her husband
Thomas Emmerson was a renowned art dealer in the mid
nineteenth century. Emmerson had a tendency to promote
the works of young self taught artists and poets and
became their self appointed votary. Eliza Emmerson mentions
in a letter to Clare of 1835, of her friendship with
a gentleman from Belfast; a self taught artist. She
claimed to own many of his "beautiful views on
the Irish coast". I have also found a reference
in an article on Google Books which suggests a connection
between Nicholl and the Emmerson's or at least that
Andrew Nicholl may have visited 20 Stratford place on
April 10, 1837 The reference suggest Nichol had a younger
sister Eliza. Is this correct?
See. "http://books.google.com/books?id=IDY0AAAAIAAJ&q=stratford+place+emmerson&dq=stratford+place+emmerson&lr=&pgis=1"
Where can I find more information about this artist?
Could Nicholl and Emmerson's have had a connection of
any kind?
If any one has any information it would be very much
appreciated.
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