Offering of the Day: "Roseate Spoonbill" John James Audubon (1785-1851)

Plate 321 - “Roseate Spoonbill”
From Birds of America
Aquatint engraving with original hand color 
Paper size: 38 1/8” x 24 5/8”  Framed size 49 1/2" x 37"
London: Robert Havell, Jr., 1827-38
Frame: Modern



Born in Haiti, John James Audubon spent his youth in France, where he studied for a time under Jacques Louis David.  He came to America in 1803, to engage in a series of unlucky ventures as a farmer, merchant and portrait painter.  None of these occupations engaged Audubon as much as his avocation: the search for birds and the studies and drawings that he made to record his discoveries.  He eventually conceived a plan to make his passion into a financially rewarding pursuit - the publication of his studies into a monumental engraved series.  During the years 1827 to 1838, both in person and by transatlantic correspondence, Audubon supervised the production of the 435 plates of his masterpiece, the Birds of America.  The most distinguished names in Europe and America were on the list of Audubon's subscribers, including King George IV of England, King Charles I of France, Daniel Webster and the distinguished institutions of the western world.  Audubon was the first to undertake the unprecedented and ambitious task of attempting to document all the bird species of the United States, and his tireless efforts and remarkable talent culminated in an unprecedented success.  Undoubtedly the greatest work on birds ever produced, its acclaim has grown steadily during the century and a half since the artist first issued his 435, larger than life, stunning birds.  


The spectacular Roseate spoonbill was commonly spotted in the mangrove swamps and marl flats of Texas and Florida in Audubon’s day.  Their rosy plummage was popularly sold for the making of fans, and by the end of the Civil War the bird had completed disappeared from Texas and only two dozens were to be found in Florida.  However, the Mexican Roseate spoonbill population remained untouched and through the valiant efforts of the National Audubon Society have been reintroduced to Texas, the Florida Keys and Everglades National Park.


Offered at $235,000


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