framed dimensions: 43.5 x 49 cm
signed and dated lower right
Robin Philipson joined the King’s Own Scottish Borderers at the outbreak of war and was posted to India, later seeing action in Burma. His watercolour Nautch Girls is likely to have been worked up back in Scotland from original drawings. Nautch, meaning dance, was a tradition going back to Mughal times but had become corrupted during the Raj and associated with prostitution. Philipson’s dancers move in a circle, reminiscent of Matisse’s La Dance, but his woman are altogether more of the flesh, performing a dance but in their diaphanous drapes, partial clothes and nudity suggesting a strip-tease. Sexualised content was frequent in Philipson painting, but at a step removed, artist like viewer observers, making no value judgement.