15 . Passiflora quadrangularis Decaisneana .
PASSIONFLOWER
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19 . Camellia Archiduchesse Marie . CAMELLIA

The Ending of the nineteenth century produced magnificent publications
brought about through the impetus of botanical exploration, which reached
its peak just before the turn of the century. The body of art and science
were tightly interwoven. It was a time when the natural sciences spawned the
most artful expression of the printer's craft ever achieved. Painters of
flowers are perhaps more numerous than painters of birds. Certainly, their
folios of original paintings and drawings are in every herbarium, such as
Kew in England, the queen of the world's herbaria. The Images found on this
CD were produced as hand colored prints, which was the method used prior to
the development of the many -stone chromolithographic process developed in
the last quarter of the nineteenth century. A botanical publication which
rivaled others of the era was REVUE HORTICOLE published in Paris
France founded in 1829 by the authors of "du Bon Jardinier"
The publishers had witnessed from personal experience that collectors of
botanical art refused to buy folio pictures of unassuming plants but felt
that they would subscribe to an octavo work which pictured the showy plants
that filled their gardens; from this premise was born REVUE HORTICOLE -
Journal D'horticulture.
This CD contains the entire collection of original images as well
as a set which has been digitally enhanced in the transfer to CD as in the
scan below. These web images are electronically watermarked, the CD images
are not.
The Revue Horticole contributing artists :Riocreux
deLongpre, Cursin, Faguet, Stroobant, Godard and others are given high
praises in GREAT FLOWER BOOKS 1700 - 1900 A Bibliographical Record of Two
centuries of Finely-Illustrated Flower Books BySACHEVERELL SITWELL and
WILFRID BLUNT "The works of these artists and others of the nineteenth
century French school of botanical artists, and, these for delicacy and
accuracy can hardly be excelled" p.61. The works of these artists are
given high praise on the following pages of this noted Botanical Reference
book::61,79,83,88,96,111, 159. Strobant and Severens are listed as the
chromolithographers of choice in France during this period on pages:
70,77,89,93,101,103,148,159160,161. .
THE TITLE PAGE BELOW IS FOR REFERENCE AND IS
INCLUDED ON THE CD.

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