Suddenly, every Company officer was commissioning Indian artists to paint not just the natural history and botany and landscapes, but also architecture and everyday life: curiosities and processions, festivals and ceremonies, modes of transport and hierarchies of domestic servants, stables of horses and troupes of dancers, crafts and trades, castes and types, and what ordinary people wore. Many of these were subjects which India바카라s princely patrons had ignored, with their concentration on images of rulers, durbars and deities. This was a 바카라clear departure from Mughal usage바카라, wrote Mildred Archer. 바카라Indian-British painting frankly accepted villagers, workers and servants, village ceremonies and rituals, as proper subjects for art바카라Š. It democratised Indian painting.바카라