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SOUTH ASIA
Ilay has spent more than fifteen years
living and travelling in South Asia,
mostly in India. His family ties with
the Indian subcontinent go back to the
mid 18th century, when his 6x great
uncle was a merchant captain trading
around the peninsula coast. His Cooper
grandparents, who married in Bombay,
were part of the British Army contingent
in India. His maternal forbears,
Ferriers, took modest roles in British
Indian history from the late eighteenth
century. His grandfather, Col. Ilay
Ferrier, Indian Army, met and married
his grandmother in Nainital. His mother
was born in Kasauli (Himachal Pradesh)
and his father, born on the Isle of
Wight, served with the British Army in
India. They met in Secunderabad in 1938.
Family photographs feature as many
Indian as British backgrounds. Stories
of ayahs, syces, cobras, elephants, a
literary diet of Kipling and a family
history richly laced with Indian tales
gave him an early interest in India. He
travelled aimlessly throughout the
subcontinent during his first visits.
After discovering Shekhawati’s wall
paintings in 1972, he made Churu,
Rajasthan, his base. (See Shekhawati &
Diu).
He was commissioned to write ARTS &
CRAFTS OF INDIA (with John Gillow,
see Publications and Photography) and
motorcycled around India, researching
and photographing craft work. This was
followed by TRADITIONAL BUILDING OF
INDIA (see Publications and
Photography), for which he repeated the
motorcycle circuit. Afterwards, he was
commissioned to write The Blue Guide to
Northern India and spent three years
travelling and researching for the text,
but this was not published.
[ To view more writing on this subject
please see
PUBLICATIONS & PHOTOGRAPHY ]

Ilay’s great grandfather
prepares for a hunting trip in Kashmir
in 1881
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