“THE MOST BEAUTIFUL AND PERFECT SPECIMENS OF THE ART”: AUDUBON’S QUADRUPEDS OF NORTH AMERICA
AUDUBON, John James and BACHMAN, John. The Quadrupeds of North America. New York: Published by V.G. Audubon, 1854. Three volumes. Royal octavo, period style full black morocco gilt, raised bands, marbled endpapers, all edges gilt.
Early edition of Audubon’s “breathtaking accomplishment… the most naturalistic depiction of American mammals ever done,” illustrated with 155 magnificent hand-colored lithographic plates.
The artwork of John James Audubon “helped to create the earliest public appreciation of American nature, and he has consistently enjoyed a place of preeminence among American painters of birds and animals” (ANB). His Quadrupeds “is a breathtaking accomplishment, and an underrated one… While most of the Birds had been drawn from life, when the 55-year-old Audubon began to make drawings for the American mammals in 1840, he was so frail that a single trip up the Missouri River to observe the larger species nearly ruined his health. In the end most of the animals were painted from memory, specimens, or even from pelts… Despite these difficulties, the result was the most naturalistic depiction of American mammals ever done. The text was largely written by the Rev. John Bachman of Charleston, an able naturalist and Lutheran clergyman, who later achieved fame for propounding the thesis that all the races of man had a common origin” (Legacies of Genius 128). After seeing the lithographs from the expedition, Bachman wrote: “They are the most beautiful and perfect specimens of the art. I doubt whether there is anything in the world of Natural History like them. I do not believe that there is any man living that can equal them” (Ford, 59). Sabin 2368. Church 1357.
Only occasional light foxing, faint offsetting. Plates generally clean and bright. A most desirable production, very handsomely bound.