Audubon, John James and James BachmanThe Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America. New York: J.J. Audubon, 1845-1846-1848-1851
6 volumes, including 3 folio plate volumes (689 x 546 mm) and 3 8vo text volumes (268 x 180 mm). Text volumes: Half-title in vol. 1, title-pages; lacking the 5 supplementary plates, light foxing and browning, very occasional marginal chips and edge tears (primarily in third volume), p.257/258 in third volume trimmed at lower margin. Folio volumes: Title-pages, contents leaves, 150 handcolored lithographed plates by J.J. Audubon and J.W. Audubon, backgrounds after Audubon, lithography by J.T. Bowen; titles and contents leaves foxed as usual, title of volume 2 creased and with a closed tear to the inner margin, plate CXXIX misnumbered CXXIV, a few plates with minor marginal soiling, plate 11, 41-44, 46-50 toned, plate 19 and 51 with marginal light foxing, plate 49 with a 2.5 inch closed marginal tear, plate 78 with small stains in the lower margin, plate 81 with a 2 inch repaired marginal tear, plate 83 with small abrasion in sky, plate 125 with minor surface soiling, plate 150 partially detached at lower inner margin. Folio volumes bound in contemporary half brown pebble morocco, purple cloth-covered boards, front covers gilt with title and supralibros, spines gilt with raised bands in seven compartments, yellow coated endpapers, gilt edges; rubbed, some loss and abrasion to heads and tails of spines, cloth faded, joints a little weak, chips and repaired tears to free-endpapers. Text volumes similarly but not uniformly bound in half brown morocco, spines gilt with raised bands in six compartments, boards ruled in gilt, all edges gilt, yellow coated endpapers; rubbed at extremities with some exposure to corners, a few nicks and scratches, water rings to boards.
A magnificently colored and remarkably fresh first edition set of Audubon's Viviparous Quadrupeds.
"I am growing old, but what of this?" wrote Audubon to his collaborator the Rev. James Bachman. "My spirits are as enthusiastical as ever, my legs full able to carry my body for ten years to come, and in about two of these I expect the illustrations out, and ere the following twelve months have elapsed, their histories studied, their descriptions carefully prepared and the book printed! Only think of the quadrupeds of America being presented to the World of Science by Audubon and Bachman" (Streshinsky, Audubon, p. 332).
By the mid-1840s, John James Audubon was the most famous naturalist painter in America. The Birds of America, his masterpiece, had been completed, earning him a tidy sum. With his fortune, Audubon built a house on the Hudson River, in what is now the Upper West Side of New York City. But even before the completion of his Birds, he had begun to consider documenting mammals in the same fashion. Indeed, Audubon wrote to a friend in 1839, several years before the completion of the double-elephant folio edition of The Birds of America, "I know a good deal about our Quadrupeds and have many valuable notes about them in my various journals of the woods and swamps."
The Quadrupeds was to be Audubon’s grand final project—one he hoped would replicate the success and scientific contribution of the Birds. While he originally conceived of it as a single-volume work of around one hundred illustrations—"the whole work to be finished (God granting me life and health) in two years!"—the three-volume work would eventually take fifteen years to complete. From the beginning, he was aware that his understanding of North American mammals was not equal to his easy familiarity with the continent’s ornithological life. Still, Audubon approached this project with characteristic zeal, and turned to his friend, and the father-in-law of his sons John and Victor, Rev. John Bachman of Charleston, for the knowledge he lacked. Bachman, an amateur naturalist, would supply the scientific expertise necessary to produce the text volumes, based on Audubon's report from an expedition into the West, which would complement the plate volumes. It would be his last major expedition, undertaken "solely for the sake of our work on the Quadrupeds of North America." The journey up the Missouri River from St. Louis in the steamboat Omega began in the spring of 1843 and returned him to that city in November of that year.
After the expedition, the artist's health began to deteriorate. He managed to complete roughly half of the drawings before his failing health kept him from the work, and the remainder were completed by his son, John Woodhouse Audubon Unlike the Birds, the Quadrupeds was truly a collaborative work. Audubon was, however, the project's éminence grise throughout the process. As Ron Tyler has written, "The master provided the genius and guiding hand. Audubon was the person who conceived the projects and had the enthusiasm and determination to see them through. He was the artist, the author, the designer, and, when the time came, the salesman. As the success of the 'little work' grew, Audubon’s dominant role in the process became more apparent." Throughout his artistic life, Audubon had occasionally sketched and painted mammals. None of his early efforts, however, compare with the seventy-seven watercolor drawings he completed for the Quadrupeds. Many of these illustrations can hold their own in subtlety and penetrating observation with the most celebrated of the Bird drawings.
It has often been remarked that the plates completed by his son John lack the masterful touch of the father’s art. An even-handed evaluation of the quality of the Quadrupeds is provided by Annette Blaugrund in her study of Audubon’s artistic development: "The plates that are based on Audubon’s drawings have graceful composition and lively representations. Those plates that are not by the elder Audubon have representations that are stiffer, less lifelike, and less original in composition. The task of completion fell to John Woodhouse Audubon who as an artist was not as talented as his father. Yet the younger artist did produce handsome work, such as Red Texan Wolf, approaching the quality of his father’s work. Nevertheless, The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America was a collaborative project. The final product resulted from the combined work of Audubon, his sons, and his printmakers. In the end, the beauty of the work is greater than the sum of its parts."
Unlike the Birds of America, the Quadrupeds was a product of the great age of lithography. The new, more economical process had quickly replaced copperplate engraving for massive undertakings of this kind. For this task, Audubon selected the Philadelphia printer J. T. Bowen. The handcoloring of the plates was also under Bowen’s supervision. A reviewer in the Boston Atlas wrote: "The plates are colored to the life, and are so thoroughly life itself, that few people would venture to put their fingers near the mouth of one of the squirrels, for fear of an actual bite." The book was to become a milestone in American printing history—no project of this size had ever been undertaken successfully in the United States. It was Bowen’s work on the plates for Thomas McKenney and James Hall’s History of the Indian Tribes of North America (see lot 33) that first alerted Audubon to the printer’s impressive skills.
The marketing and distribution of the Quadrupeds would follow the system used for the Birds: fascicles of five plates would be issued bi-monthly to subscribers. This dauntingly massive enterprise was eventually a commercial success owing chiefly to Victor Audubon’s careful management. Before Audubon’s death in 1851, his sons succeeded in soliciting some three hundred subscriptions for the work.
Critical appreciation of the work was almost immediate, as was pride in the fact that the work was produced entirely in the United States and without foreign patronage. In 1847, the American Review enthused, "We have at last a Great National Work, originated and completed among us—the authors, artists, and artisans of which are our own citizens … We have no truer mission here than that of commentators upon the illustrators of God’s first revelation to us—'the Bible of Nature!' and it would be very difficult to find a Family whose deeds and history more entirely illustrate their recognition of such an Apostleship. They may be called the Levites of a new order of priesthood in the Temple of Nature!" This sentiment was echoed by Charles W. Webber in the Southern Quarterly Review (October 1847): "Audubon saw that art was universal, and that the earth was God’s earth and not man’s. His genius perceived something purer and more ennobling in the mission of art, than the sole perpetuation of the bloody and perverted passions of humanity. He felt that nothing that God has made is common or unclean to the true artist. HIS truth is every where symmetrical, and though we may turn in disgust from distorted exhibitions of the distorted man, yet are our senses freshened—still is our faith cheered by those chaste revelations of a primeval and most beneficent purpose, which Audubon has bravely snatched from out the ‘waste places’ of God’s earth!"
The "largest successful color plate book project of 19th-century America" (William Reese).
REFERENCE:Boehme., et al., John James Audubon in the West: The Last Expedition. Mammals of North America (New York, 2000); Ford, John James Audubon A Biography (New York, 1988); Irmscher, ed., John James Audubon Writings and Drawings (New York, 1999); McGill/Wood, p. 208; Nissen ZBI 162; Reese, Nineteenth Century American Color Plate Books (New York, 1999), 36; Rhodes, ed. The Audubon Reader (New York, 2006); Streshinsky, Audubon, p. 332
PROVENANCE:George W. Turner (supralibros; signatures dated 1853 to pastedowns of text volumes) — Sotheby's New York, 26 June 1998, lot 555 (undesignated consignor)Condition reportCondition as described in catalogue entry.
The lot is sold in the condition it is in at the time of sale. The condition report is provided to assist you with assessing the condition of the lot and is for guidance only. Any reference to condition in the condition report for the lot does not amount to a full description of condition. The images of the lot form part of the condition report for the lot. Certain images of the lot provided online may not accurately reflect the actual condition of the lot. In particular, the online images may represent colors and shades which are different to the lot's actual color and shades. The condition report for the lot may make reference to particular imperfections of the lot but you should note that the lot may have other faults not expressly referred to in the condition report for the lot or shown in the online images of the lot. The condition report may not refer to all faults, restoration, alteration or adaptation. The condition report is a statement of opinion only. For that reason, the condition report is not an alternative to taking your own professional advice regarding the condition of the lot. NOTWITHSTANDING THIS ONLINE CONDITION REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE/BUSINESS APPLICABLE TO THE RESPECTIVE SALE.
Audubon, John James and James BachmanThe Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America. New York: J.J. Audubon, 1845-1846-1848-1851
6 volumes, including 3 folio plate volumes (689 x 546 mm) and 3 8vo text volumes (268 x 180 mm). Text volumes: Half-title in vol. 1, title-pages; lacking the 5 supplementary plates, light foxing and browning, very occasional marginal chips and edge tears (primarily in third volume), p.257/258 in third volume trimmed at lower margin. Folio volumes: Title-pages, contents leaves, 150 handcolored lithographed plates by J.J. Audubon and J.W. Audubon, backgrounds after Audubon, lithography by J.T. Bowen; titles and contents leaves foxed as usual, title of volume 2 creased and with a closed tear to the inner margin, plate CXXIX misnumbered CXXIV, a few plates with minor marginal soiling, plate 11, 41-44, 46-50 toned, plate 19 and 51 with marginal light foxing, plate 49 with a 2.5 inch closed marginal tear, plate 78 with small stains in the lower margin, plate 81 with a 2 inch repaired marginal tear, plate 83 with small abrasion in sky, plate 125 with minor surface soiling, plate 150 partially detached at lower inner margin. Folio volumes bound in contemporary half brown pebble morocco, purple cloth-covered boards, front covers gilt with title and supralibros, spines gilt with raised bands in seven compartments, yellow coated endpapers, gilt edges; rubbed, some loss and abrasion to heads and tails of spines, cloth faded, joints a little weak, chips and repaired tears to free-endpapers. Text volumes similarly but not uniformly bound in half brown morocco, spines gilt with raised bands in six compartments, boards ruled in gilt, all edges gilt, yellow coated endpapers; rubbed at extremities with some exposure to corners, a few nicks and scratches, water rings to boards.
A magnificently colored and remarkably fresh first edition set of Audubon's Viviparous Quadrupeds.
"I am growing old, but what of this?" wrote Audubon to his collaborator the Rev. James Bachman. "My spirits are as enthusiastical as ever, my legs full able to carry my body for ten years to come, and in about two of these I expect the illustrations out, and ere the following twelve months have elapsed, their histories studied, their descriptions carefully prepared and the book printed! Only think of the quadrupeds of America being presented to the World of Science by Audubon and Bachman" (Streshinsky, Audubon, p. 332).
By the mid-1840s, John James Audubon was the most famous naturalist painter in America. The Birds of America, his masterpiece, had been completed, earning him a tidy sum. With his fortune, Audubon built a house on the Hudson River, in what is now the Upper West Side of New York City. But even before the completion of his Birds, he had begun to consider documenting mammals in the same fashion. Indeed, Audubon wrote to a friend in 1839, several years before the completion of the double-elephant folio edition of The Birds of America, "I know a good deal about our Quadrupeds and have many valuable notes about them in my various journals of the woods and swamps."
The Quadrupeds was to be Audubon’s grand final project—one he hoped would replicate the success and scientific contribution of the Birds. While he originally conceived of it as a single-volume work of around one hundred illustrations—"the whole work to be finished (God granting me life and health) in two years!"—the three-volume work would eventually take fifteen years to complete. From the beginning, he was aware that his understanding of North American mammals was not equal to his easy familiarity with the continent’s ornithological life. Still, Audubon approached this project with characteristic zeal, and turned to his friend, and the father-in-law of his sons John and Victor, Rev. John Bachman of Charleston, for the knowledge he lacked. Bachman, an amateur naturalist, would supply the scientific expertise necessary to produce the text volumes, based on Audubon's report from an expedition into the West, which would complement the plate volumes. It would be his last major expedition, undertaken "solely for the sake of our work on the Quadrupeds of North America." The journey up the Missouri River from St. Louis in the steamboat Omega began in the spring of 1843 and returned him to that city in November of that year.
After the expedition, the artist's health began to deteriorate. He managed to complete roughly half of the drawings before his failing health kept him from the work, and the remainder were completed by his son, John Woodhouse Audubon Unlike the Birds, the Quadrupeds was truly a collaborative work. Audubon was, however, the project's éminence grise throughout the process. As Ron Tyler has written, "The master provided the genius and guiding hand. Audubon was the person who conceived the projects and had the enthusiasm and determination to see them through. He was the artist, the author, the designer, and, when the time came, the salesman. As the success of the 'little work' grew, Audubon’s dominant role in the process became more apparent." Throughout his artistic life, Audubon had occasionally sketched and painted mammals. None of his early efforts, however, compare with the seventy-seven watercolor drawings he completed for the Quadrupeds. Many of these illustrations can hold their own in subtlety and penetrating observation with the most celebrated of the Bird drawings.
It has often been remarked that the plates completed by his son John lack the masterful touch of the father’s art. An even-handed evaluation of the quality of the Quadrupeds is provided by Annette Blaugrund in her study of Audubon’s artistic development: "The plates that are based on Audubon’s drawings have graceful composition and lively representations. Those plates that are not by the elder Audubon have representations that are stiffer, less lifelike, and less original in composition. The task of completion fell to John Woodhouse Audubon who as an artist was not as talented as his father. Yet the younger artist did produce handsome work, such as Red Texan Wolf, approaching the quality of his father’s work. Nevertheless, The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America was a collaborative project. The final product resulted from the combined work of Audubon, his sons, and his printmakers. In the end, the beauty of the work is greater than the sum of its parts."
Unlike the Birds of America, the Quadrupeds was a product of the great age of lithography. The new, more economical process had quickly replaced copperplate engraving for massive undertakings of this kind. For this task, Audubon selected the Philadelphia printer J. T. Bowen. The handcoloring of the plates was also under Bowen’s supervision. A reviewer in the Boston Atlas wrote: "The plates are colored to the life, and are so thoroughly life itself, that few people would venture to put their fingers near the mouth of one of the squirrels, for fear of an actual bite." The book was to become a milestone in American printing history—no project of this size had ever been undertaken successfully in the United States. It was Bowen’s work on the plates for Thomas McKenney and James Hall’s History of the Indian Tribes of North America (see lot 33) that first alerted Audubon to the printer’s impressive skills.
The marketing and distribution of the Quadrupeds would follow the system used for the Birds: fascicles of five plates would be issued bi-monthly to subscribers. This dauntingly massive enterprise was eventually a commercial success owing chiefly to Victor Audubon’s careful management. Before Audubon’s death in 1851, his sons succeeded in soliciting some three hundred subscriptions for the work.
Critical appreciation of the work was almost immediate, as was pride in the fact that the work was produced entirely in the United States and without foreign patronage. In 1847, the American Review enthused, "We have at last a Great National Work, originated and completed among us—the authors, artists, and artisans of which are our own citizens … We have no truer mission here than that of commentators upon the illustrators of God’s first revelation to us—'the Bible of Nature!' and it would be very difficult to find a Family whose deeds and history more entirely illustrate their recognition of such an Apostleship. They may be called the Levites of a new order of priesthood in the Temple of Nature!" This sentiment was echoed by Charles W. Webber in the Southern Quarterly Review (October 1847): "Audubon saw that art was universal, and that the earth was God’s earth and not man’s. His genius perceived something purer and more ennobling in the mission of art, than the sole perpetuation of the bloody and perverted passions of humanity. He felt that nothing that God has made is common or unclean to the true artist. HIS truth is every where symmetrical, and though we may turn in disgust from distorted exhibitions of the distorted man, yet are our senses freshened—still is our faith cheered by those chaste revelations of a primeval and most beneficent purpose, which Audubon has bravely snatched from out the ‘waste places’ of God’s earth!"
The "largest successful color plate book project of 19th-century America" (William Reese).
REFERENCE:Boehme., et al., John James Audubon in the West: The Last Expedition. Mammals of North America (New York, 2000); Ford, John James Audubon A Biography (New York, 1988); Irmscher, ed., John James Audubon Writings and Drawings (New York, 1999); McGill/Wood, p. 208; Nissen ZBI 162; Reese, Nineteenth Century American Color Plate Books (New York, 1999), 36; Rhodes, ed. The Audubon Reader (New York, 2006); Streshinsky, Audubon, p. 332
PROVENANCE:George W. Turner (supralibros; signatures dated 1853 to pastedowns of text volumes) — Sotheby's New York, 26 June 1998, lot 555 (undesignated consignor)Condition reportCondition as described in catalogue entry.
The lot is sold in the condition it is in at the time of sale. The condition report is provided to assist you with assessing the condition of the lot and is for guidance only. Any reference to condition in the condition report for the lot does not amount to a full description of condition. The images of the lot form part of the condition report for the lot. Certain images of the lot provided online may not accurately reflect the actual condition of the lot. In particular, the online images may represent colors and shades which are different to the lot's actual color and shades. The condition report for the lot may make reference to particular imperfections of the lot but you should note that the lot may have other faults not expressly referred to in the condition report for the lot or shown in the online images of the lot. The condition report may not refer to all faults, restoration, alteration or adaptation. The condition report is a statement of opinion only. For that reason, the condition report is not an alternative to taking your own professional advice regarding the condition of the lot. NOTWITHSTANDING THIS ONLINE CONDITION REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE/BUSINESS APPLICABLE TO THE RESPECTIVE SALE.
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