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Plates 26-38: William Curtis, Botanical Magazine, 1827-1936

 File — Multiple Containers

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

This collection of botanical prints contains original plates from herbals, plant histories, and botanical books and magazines from the 15th through the 19th centuries. The prints provide primary source materials illustrating the technological developments of early modern botanical, pharmacological , and medical sciences as well as the history and development of botanical illustration from woodcuts, to copperplate engravings, to chromolithographs. A few engraved portraits of botanists are included. The prints were selected to represent technical innovation in scientific illustration and for their intrinsic beauty.

The collection begins with a leaf from the Hortus Sanitatus of 1491, illustrated with woodcuts copied from manuscripts; followed by leaves from Leonhart Fuchs’s New Kreüterbuch of 1543, one of the earliest botanical works to reflect the new spirit of empirical observation and the beginnings of modern science. As scientific inquiry gathered momentum, the woodcut was replaced in the mid-sixteenth century by the copperplate engraving, which dominated the “golden age” of botanical illustration until the end of the eighteenth century, when printing from the surface of stone, or lithography, was invented by Aloys Senefelder in 1798. The lithograph quickly supplanted the costly engraving as a much cheaper and faster method of reproducing pictures. Thomas Bewick’s revival of “white line” wood engraving at about the same time was used for illustrating the cheaper popular natural history books.

Dates

  • Creation: 1827-1936

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research use.

Historical Note

William Curtis (1746-1799), English botanist and apothecary who founded the Botanical Magazine in 1787. Curtis’s first publishing venture was the Flora Londinensis, an artistic success but a financial disaster. He began the Botanical Magazine with a completely different point of view from his first publication, which was to illustrate and describe “the most ornamental foreign plants cultivated in the open ground, the green-house, and stove.” All of the plates were handcolored and continued to be so from February 1787 to February 1948. Of the many artists and editors who contributed to the Botanical Magazine certainly the most famous was William Jackson Hooker (1785-1865), the first director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew in London. Note: all dimensions are measured to the platemark.

Extent

From the Collection: 5.58 Linear Feet (3 oversize boxes)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Repository Details

Part of the Butler University Special Collections and University Archives Repository

Contact:
4600 Sunset Avenue
Irwin Library 345
Indianapolis Indiana 46208 United States