Description:
Legare Street Press, 2023. Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed.
Rehbock - Eleotragus Capreolus by WATERHOUSE HAWKINS, Benjamin - 1847
by WATERHOUSE HAWKINS, Benjamin
Rehbock - Eleotragus Capreolus
by WATERHOUSE HAWKINS, Benjamin
- Used
London: Printed by McLean & Co, 1847. Colour-printed lithograph with additional hand-colouring. Printed on fine thick wove paper. Very good condition apart from some overall light soiling and minor foxing in the image and the margins. A fine plate from John Edward Gray's "Gleanings from the Menagerie at Knowsley," a comprehensive visual survey of one of the largest private menagerie's in Victorian England. Edward Smith Stanley, 13th Earl of Derby (1775-1851) was a learned naturalist, who pursued his avid interest in zoology after a brief and unfulfilling political career. In addition to his frequent contributions to the Zoological Society's journal Proceedings , Stanley served as president of the Linnaean Society from 1828 to 1833 and, towards the end of his life, as president of the Zoological Society. He is probably best known, however, for the extensive menagerie of birds, quadrupeds, reptiles, and fish that he founded on his family estate of Knowsley outside of Liverpool. Stanley invested a significant amount of his fortune maintaining the menagerie and adding to the impressive collection of specimens housed in its zoological museum. He enlisted the help of two great 19th-century natural history artists to visually record aspects of his sizeable menagerie in its hey-day: Edward Lear (1812-1888) to record the birds and Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins the "Hoofed Quadrupeds." These remarkable images were published between 1846 and 1850 in J. E. Gray's Gleanings from the Knowsley Menagerie and Aviary at Knowsley Hall . Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins was a distinguished natural history artist and sculptor, who was primarily known for the popular full-sized replicas of dinosaurs and prehistoric reptiles that he created with Richard Owen for the Crystal Palace exhibition of 1853-4. He later moved to New York to produce similar life-like models for the American Museum of National History. Cf. Dictionary of National Biography ; cf. Nissen ZBI 1691.
- Bookseller Donald Heald Rare Books (US)
- Book Condition Used
- Quantity Available 1
- Publisher Printed by McLean & Co
- Place of Publication London
- Date Published 1847
- Keywords 19th century