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Red Necked Grebe
Plate 298 |
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John James Audubon.The Birds of America. |
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Audubon's Birds of America remains the single most important ornithological work ever produced. At no time in the history of America has there been a work comparable in either scope or beauty. Audubon's ambitious goal was to travel throughout the United States recording, in life size, every bird native to the country. This was the first life-size depiction of the birds of North America showing them in natural poses amongst the flora of their habitats. The work remains over a century and a half later the paradigm work of American ornithology. In production for over fourteen years the complete set included 435 magnificent hand-colored engravings. Each image was painstakingly engraved into the massive copper plates. After hand inking the plate and pulling the individual strike, each image was then water-colored by hand to replicate Audubon's original drawing. The paper was the finest available in the period and bears the "Whatman Turkey-Mill" watermark. The colossal size of the sheets and presented a huge challenge to the engravers, but allowed for an amazing amount of detail. Painted in 1832 or 1833 in Boston, this work depicts an adult male in spring plumage in the left half of the image and in the right half of the image a young bird in winter plumage on a bank surrounded by water and grasses. |
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Tam O'Neill Fine Arts |
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311 Detroit St. Denver, CO 80206 |
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For
More Information call 1-(800)-4-AUDUBON |
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