[L'aigle criard; L'aigle criard (jeune); L'élanoide blanc.
£125,000 · Offered by Shapero Rare Books
original watercolours signed by Jacques Barraband for the Description de L'Egypte Jacques Barraband (1767-1809) was the finest ornithological artist of his time. The son of a weaver at the Aubusson Factory, he is first mentioned as a pupil of Joseph Malaine (1745-1809), the eminent flower painter, and is known to have worked for both the Gobelin Factory and the porcelain factory of Sèvres. These watercolours are excellent examples of Barraband's remarkable talent and meticulous detail when it came to depicting plumage and colour. These watercolours were in fact intended to illustrate the 'System of Birds of Egypt and Syria' written by the zoologist Marie-Jules César Lelorme de Savigny (1777-1851) and published in 1809. This text was itself part of Volume I of the 'Natural History of the Description of Egypt', or 'Collection of observations and research that were made in Egypt during the expedition of the French army, published by the orders of his majesty the Emperor Napoleon the Great'. This work, which consisted of 9 volumes of texts and 11 volumes of plates, was the fruit of the important scientific expedition that accompanied Napoleon's Egyptian campaign whcih was launched in April 1798. The Description de l'Egypte work aimed to highlight the greatness of Egypt, which at the time was extremely popular in Europe. In order to produce the most complete vision of Egypt, as well as the antiquities and architecture, the fauna and flora were also described with contributions by
- Binding: Hardcover
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