'Hottentots'

Print depicting a group of 'Hottentots' or Khoikhoi by Charles Davidson Bell. It ilustrated Bell's fears regarding the potential dangers of unguided western imperialism. The man is drinking, the woman has cigarettes, while the woman behind brandishes a blunt instrument. All are dressed in Western clothes.

Charles Davidson Bell sketched a number of ethnographic studies of the different non-European South Africans he found while living there, some not long after he arrived in 1830, others while on an expedition into the Interior with Dr Andrew Smith in 1834 and more still on his return to Scotland sometime later. The sketches were heavily laden with the colonialists views and opinions on each ethnic group. 'Malays' were seen as elegant and graceful; 'Hottentots' (Khoikhoi) as uncouth; 'Kaffirs' (Xhosa) as warriors.

Bell was based at the Cape at the same time as the Herschels and in the small colonial community they became friends. Both were concerned about the plight of the non-European South Africans. They were also interested in the work of the missionaries. Though Bell never made a living from his work as an artist, he had copies made to give or to sell to interested friends. Some of these copies can be found in the Bell Heritage Trust Collection at the University of Cape Town, South Africa.

Object Details

ID: PAH6027
Type: Print
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Bell, Charles Davidson; Schenck, Emil Ernst Friedrich T Schenck, Emil Ernst Friedrich T
Date made: circa 1850
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, Herschel Collection
Measurements: Overall: 397 x 271 mm
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