Laos birman. Populations mixtes des royaumes de Xieng Tong et de Xieng Hong (Burmese Laos, mixed populations of the kingdoms of Xieng Tong and Xieng Hong)

Title
Laos birman. Populations mixtes des royaumes de Xieng Tong et de Xieng Hong (Burmese Laos, mixed populations of the kingdoms of Xieng Tong and Xieng Hong)
Creator
Year/Period
1873
Region
Laos
Object Type
Technique
Dimension
Image size: 28.0 x 38.0,
Object size: 37.0 x 50.0 cm,
Object size: 37.0 x 50.3 cm
Accession No.
2021-00848
Credit Line
Gift of John and Pauline Foo

These lithographs were made after the drawings of Louis Delaporte (1842-1925), a young naval officer and skilled draftsman who accompanied the 1866-1868 Mekong Exploration Commission. The exploration of the Mekong was one of the most significant expeditions in Southeast Asia in the nineteenth century, taking two years to complete and covering territory of what is now Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and south China. The principle goal of the expedition was to discover whether the Mekong could be a river trade route to China from the newly-established French territories in south Vietnam. The explorers also documented the landscape, local peoples and cultures, and flora and fauna.While the subject matter of Delaporte's illustrations indicates the scientific aspirations of the expedition, the images actually emphasise picturesque and exotic elements, which created the popular appeal for the published accounts of the expedition. The inclusion of "pictures of types," such as in this image, is an example. The artist’s style is generally highly detailed, in keeping with his official role of visually documenting the expedition, establishing the verisimilitude of the imagery. These images demonstrate the intimate connections between exploration, colonialism, representation and the pursuit of knowledge.