A Signed Watercolor of a Tulip by Arguably the Finest Flower Painter of 18th century Europe, Georg Dionysius Ehret (1708-1770)
Georg Dionysius Ehret (1708-1770)
Tulip Study
Paper size: 13 1/4 x 19 1/2 inches
Watercolor on paper
Inscribed lower right: GD Ehret Pinx’t
$325,000
This significant watercolor is by Georg Dionysius Ehret
(1708-1770), arguably the finest flower painter of the eighteenth- century
Europe. Ehret's work stands as a
preeminent accomplishment of European botanical art, and the reasons for this
acclaim are immediately evident in the virtuoso draftsmanship and fine, nuanced
coloring of these works. Born in
Heidelburg to a market gardener, Ehret began his working life as a gardener's
apprentice, eventually becoming a chief gardener for the Elector of Heidelburg
and the Margrave of Baden, whose prize tulips and hyacinths he painted. Ehret
soon moved on to a number of cities across Europe, collecting eminent friends
and important patrons as he traveled.
His list of benefactors included the most brilliant and celebrated
natural history enthusiasts of his day, among whom was Dr. Christopher Trew, a
wealthy Nuremberg physician who became his lifelong patron, friend and collaborator. From 1750 until Ehret’s death in 1770, he and
Trew collaborated on the publication of the important illustrated volumes
Plantae Selectae and Hortus Nitidissimus, both of which added to the rising
acclaim for the artist's considerable talents as a botanical painter. Also among Ehret's admirers were the Parisian
naturalist Bernard de Jussieu and the great Swedish naturalist Linnaeus, and
Ehret's illustrations are some of the first works to reflect the Linnaean
system of classification.
Ehret was one of the first artists to focus on exotic
species from across the Atlantic, and his draftsmanship was so fine that his
friend and colleague, the great artist/naturalist Mark Catesby, used at least
three of the German painter’s botanical illustrations for his seminal Natural
History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands. For the engraving of the Canada Lily, Catesby
copied an earlier watercolor by Ehret of the Martagon, nearly identical to the
example in this set. Today, Ehret’s
images are widely considered the most desirable to emerge from that monumental
publication, and he collaborated with Catesby in other ways, too, in the
compilation of the Natural History, offering advice or adding significant
elements to Catesby’s initial compositions.
Catesby was influenced greatly by Ehret’s accomplished style, especially
in the representation of three- dimensionality, but the older artist was never
able to attain the same high level of meticulous realism and vitality. Ehret, in turn, drew on a number of Catesby’s
discoveries and observations in his own work (see the Bignonia, above
left). Unlike Catesby, Ehret was never
able to travel to America, but became fascinated with examples of New World
flora that he saw in English natural history collections, such as that of Peter
Collinson, a friend and patron of both artists.
Painted just at the time of the publication of Catesby’s Natural
History, these five watercolors are spectacular early representations of
American flora.
In England, where he eventually settled, Ehret became the
only foreigner to be elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. Though Ehret's work is best known through
printed illustrations done in collaboration with Trew, even his impressive
engravings cannot compare with the vibrancy, color, and detail of the original
paintings. Only in his remarkably
sensuous and accurate watercolors is the full extent of his mastery and
sensitivity clear. Ehret's delicate
modulations of tone and shadow bring a vitality to these exquisite original
watercolors, belying their ostensibly documentary purpose. His distinctive style transcends scientific
illustration, achieving a level of beauty that has rarely been equaled in the
history of botanical art.
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