Curio

State Library of New South Wales

Hara-o & Karadra in Drawings and etchings of Nepean and Springwood Aboriginal m

1819
PXD 923/7
Sepia wash drawing

Alphonse Pellion was a topographical painter, draughtsman and mid-shipman aboard the French vessel l'Uranie. In 1817 the ship set sail from France on an around-the-world voyage of exploration and science. Its professional scientists, naturalists and artists were charged with making scientific and ethnographic observations of the Indigenous people encountered.

In November 1819 the vessel landed at Sydney, and the crew was sent to explore the colony. Pellion and two of his companions set out across the Blue Mountains to visit the newly established town of Bathurst. During this trip he made a number of sketches, including views of Cox’s Pass, Cox’s River, and the local Indigenous people.

This sepia wash drawing was created by Sebestian Leroy, who was most likely a French commercial artist employed to devise an original pen and ink drawing by Pellion and prepare it for publication.This scene depicts two Aboriginal men Pellion met on the lower Blue Mountains on his way to Bathurst.

Hara-o and Karadra

The illustration’s inscription states
‘Voyages a Bathurst / Jeunes Sauvages de la Nouvelle du Sud dans leur camp. d’apres nature.’ 
‘Voyage to Bathurst/Young savages of New South Wales at their camp. From nature.’
This is a preparatory work for the published plate of Hara-o (left) and Karadra (right) in the official account of the expedition 'Voyage autour du monde: fait par ordre du roi sur les corvettes de S.M. l'Uranie et la Physicienne, pendant les annes 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820: Atlas historique, Paris, 1825' as plate 101.