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Auction archive: Lot number 212

WALLICH, Nathaniel (1786-1854). Plantae Asiaticae rariores; or, Descriptions and figures of a select number of unpublished East Indian plants . London: [Richard Taylor for] Treuttel and Würtz, [1829]-1830-1832

Auction 13.06.2002
13 Jun 2002
Estimate
£30,000 - £50,000
ca. US$44,502 - US$74,171
Price realised:
£62,140
ca. US$92,179
Auction archive: Lot number 212

WALLICH, Nathaniel (1786-1854). Plantae Asiaticae rariores; or, Descriptions and figures of a select number of unpublished East Indian plants . London: [Richard Taylor for] Treuttel and Würtz, [1829]-1830-1832

Auction 13.06.2002
13 Jun 2002
Estimate
£30,000 - £50,000
ca. US$44,502 - US$74,171
Price realised:
£62,140
ca. US$92,179
Beschreibung:

WALLICH, Nathaniel (1786-1854). Plantae Asiaticae rariores; or, Descriptions and figures of a select number of unpublished East Indian plants . London: [Richard Taylor for] Treuttel and Würtz, [1829]-1830-1832 3 volumes, 2° (534 x 355mm.), 295 hand-coloured lithographic plates on 294 sheets, by M. Gauci and Weddell after Gorchand, Vishnu Prasad, M. Curtis, Miss Drake, and others, plates 222/223 constituting one folding plate, printed by Engelmann, Graf, Coindet & Co., Engelmann & Co., and Graf & Soret. One folding double-page engraved map. (A little thumb-soiling of plate margins, plates 13 and 22 in vol. I slightly affected by damp, occasional spotting of text.) Contemporary green morocco gilt by J. Mackenzie, 'bookbinder to the King,' covers with wide floral border, spine compartments tooled with a central sunflower, rosettes and semi-circles of strawberries, gilt turn-ins, comb-marbled endpapers, gilt edges. A MAGNIFICENT RENDERING OF INDIAN PLANTS according to European taste, including on the first plate the orchid tree ( Amherstia nobilis ) which the author had found near a derelict monastery on the Salween river in what is now Myanmar. Like Roxburgh's earlier Plants of the Coast of Coromandel , this work was heavily subsidised by the East India Company, and even employed the same team of artists at the Calcutta botanic garden where Wallich (né Wulff), who was born in Copenhagen, served as director from 1817 to 1846. The Indian plant illustrator Gorchand executed 146 watercolour paintings for the work, and his colleague Vishnu Prasad 109, 'but all that is known about these two is their miserable pay - they received the same salary as scribes' (Lack). Wallich had several years, leave of absence in England to supervise the printing and colouring. According to his preface, the skilled colourist was 'Mr. John Clark ' Arnold Arboretum p. 729; Dunthorne 326 ('many decorative plates all well and carefully drawn'); Great Flower Books p. 151; Lack, Ein Garten Eden 70; Nissen BBI 2099; Pritzel 9957; Stafleu and Cowan 16583.

Auction archive: Lot number 212
Auction:
Datum:
13 Jun 2002
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
Beschreibung:

WALLICH, Nathaniel (1786-1854). Plantae Asiaticae rariores; or, Descriptions and figures of a select number of unpublished East Indian plants . London: [Richard Taylor for] Treuttel and Würtz, [1829]-1830-1832 3 volumes, 2° (534 x 355mm.), 295 hand-coloured lithographic plates on 294 sheets, by M. Gauci and Weddell after Gorchand, Vishnu Prasad, M. Curtis, Miss Drake, and others, plates 222/223 constituting one folding plate, printed by Engelmann, Graf, Coindet & Co., Engelmann & Co., and Graf & Soret. One folding double-page engraved map. (A little thumb-soiling of plate margins, plates 13 and 22 in vol. I slightly affected by damp, occasional spotting of text.) Contemporary green morocco gilt by J. Mackenzie, 'bookbinder to the King,' covers with wide floral border, spine compartments tooled with a central sunflower, rosettes and semi-circles of strawberries, gilt turn-ins, comb-marbled endpapers, gilt edges. A MAGNIFICENT RENDERING OF INDIAN PLANTS according to European taste, including on the first plate the orchid tree ( Amherstia nobilis ) which the author had found near a derelict monastery on the Salween river in what is now Myanmar. Like Roxburgh's earlier Plants of the Coast of Coromandel , this work was heavily subsidised by the East India Company, and even employed the same team of artists at the Calcutta botanic garden where Wallich (né Wulff), who was born in Copenhagen, served as director from 1817 to 1846. The Indian plant illustrator Gorchand executed 146 watercolour paintings for the work, and his colleague Vishnu Prasad 109, 'but all that is known about these two is their miserable pay - they received the same salary as scribes' (Lack). Wallich had several years, leave of absence in England to supervise the printing and colouring. According to his preface, the skilled colourist was 'Mr. John Clark ' Arnold Arboretum p. 729; Dunthorne 326 ('many decorative plates all well and carefully drawn'); Great Flower Books p. 151; Lack, Ein Garten Eden 70; Nissen BBI 2099; Pritzel 9957; Stafleu and Cowan 16583.

Auction archive: Lot number 212
Auction:
Datum:
13 Jun 2002
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
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