Pink-Headed Duck

Image credit: World Museum Liverpool

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The pink-headed duck became extinct both in the wild an in captivity in about the 1920s and 1930s. It was found around the confluence of the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers in Bengal and Bangladesh, and was still to be found in Calcutta markets at the beginning of the century.

World Museum Liverpool

Liverpool

Title

Pink-Headed Duck

Date

1777–1782

Medium

watercolour, heightened with white, in gouache on European laid paper

Measurements

H 47.3 x W 34 cm

Accession number

NML-VZ 1999.36.4

Acquisition method

acquired (in lieu of tax) from the Executors of the Estate of the late 18th Earl of Derby of Knowsley hall, by National Museums & Galleries on Merseyside, with a contribution from the National Art Collections Fund and the Friends of the National Museums & Galleries on Merseyside

Work type

Watercolour

Inscription description

166. 35. In the collection of Lady Impey at Calcutta. Painted by (Bhawani Das) native of Patna. Encircled D, the stamp of the Earl of Derby.

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