James Sowerby (1757–1822)
4 original
engravings of thistles with hand-colouring as published in “English Botany; or,
Coloured Figures of British Plants, with their Essential Characters, Synonyms,
and Places of Growth.”
(upper-left
image) “Cnicus Palustris, Plate 974: 1116”, 1802 (inscribed on plate);
(upper-centre
image) “Cnicus Eriophorus, Plate 386: 1118”, 1797 (inscribed on plate);
(upper-right
image) “Cnicus Pratensis, Plate 177: 1121”, 179? (inscribed indistinctly on
plate);
(lower image)
“Cnicus Aculis: Plate 161: 1122”, 1794 (inscribed on plate).
Engravings on
fine cream wove paper with hand-applied watercolour (as published by Sowerby)
Size: (each sheet)
21.2 x 13 cm.
For information
on Sowerby’s illustrations, see http://www.illustratedgarden.org/mobot/rarebooks/author.asp?creator=Sowerby,%20James&creatorID=94
and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Botany.
Condition:
crisp impressions with exquisite hand-colouring (as published) in pristine
condition.
I am selling
these four original engravings from the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries for
the total cost of only AU$98 (currently US$70.87/EUR63.18/GBP48.67 at the time
of posting this print) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing these small but stunningly beautiful illustrations of
thistles, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send
you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
“Cnicus Palustris, Plate 974: 1116”, 1802
“Cnicus Eriophorus, Plate 386: 1118”, 1797
“Cnicus Pratensis, Plate 177: 1121”, 179?
“Cnicus Aculis: Plate 161: 1122”, 1794
In case there
are illustrators, especially botanical illustrators, who are not familiar with
the engravings of James Sowerby, I strongly advise a quick stint of Googled
research—his work is worth knowing about!
Essentially,
Sowerby is probably the most famous of all English botanical illustrators. His
fame rests marginally on the fineness of his engravings and their delicate
hand-colouring, like the beautiful engravings of thistles shown here. The real
reason for his fame, however, is simply because of his publication, “English
Botany”, that was released in “36 issues and 267 numbers, for over twenty-four
years” (to quote Huber M Walsh, a volunteer librarian from Rare Books from the
MGB Library). In short, it became so well known that it was THE periodical for
gardeners and botanists. Going further, according to Walsh, even today “it is
regarded as an authoritative reference source” (http://www.illustratedgarden.org/mobot/rarebooks/author.asp?creator=Sowerby,%20James&creatorID=94).
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