1) Iride 2) Viola porporina
Biblioteca Nazionale di Napoli - Biblioteca digitale - Dioscurides Neapolitanus
Biblioteca Nazionale di Napoli - Biblioteca digitale - Dioscurides Neapolitanus
I've always been really interested in the historical aspects of botanical art but I've been finding out more and more about it ever since I visited the new Shirley Sherwood Gallery at Kew in April and saw, for the very first time, botanical art which had been drawn or painted by the acknowledged experts in this field.
Since then I've been digging around on the internet to find more sites about the history of botanical illustration - and have found that there's quite a lot to look at. As a result I've created a new resource for those interested in learning more about the history of botanical illustration - The History of Botanical Art - Resources for Botanical Art Lovers. It includes:
- landmark publications - such as the important Herbals and Florilegium and drawings made as a result of explorations - such as The Endeavour Botanical Illustrations at the Natural History Museum
- Outstanding botanical artists in history
- Collections of historical botanical art
- Online galleries of the history of botanical art
- Exhibitions of botanical art from the past and
- Digital versions of historical books about botanical art
Completed sites
- Maria Sibylla Merian - see Maria Sibylla Merian - Resources for botanical art lovers
- Basilius Besler
- Georg Dionysius Ehret
- Sydney Parkinson
- Bauer Brothers
- Pierre Redoute
- Margaret Mee
Note about the illustration:
Pedanius Dioscorides (ca. 40-ca. 90) was an ancient Greek physician, pharmacologist and botanist, who sought medical substances from all over the Roman and Greek world. He practised in ancient Rome during the time of Nero and is famous for writing a five volume book De Materia Medica. This is one of the most influential herbal books in history, provided a basleine for all modern pharmacopeias and remained in use until about 1600. A number of illustrated manuscripts of the Materia Medica survive, some of them from as early as the 5th through 7th centuries. The most famous of these early copies is the Vienna Dioscurides (512/513). The Illustration is from Codex ex Vindobonensis Graecus 1 in the Biblioteca Nazionale di Napoli
Wikipedia - Dioscorides
Links:
- The History of Botanical Art - Resources for Botanical Art Lovers
- Kew opens the world's first dedicated botanical art gallery
- Maria Sibylla Merian - at the Getty Museum, Buckingham Palace and Kew Gardens
- Book Review - 1001 Plant and floral illustrations from early herbals
- Book Review: Merian's Antique Botanical Prints
- Book Review: Besler's Book of Flowers and Plants
I love some of the very old drawings of botanticals that were very simplistic and often based on folklore such as the mandrake root. The almost naieve drawings are very appealing and, as you said, the stories around them make you want to find out more.
ReplyDeleteIts probably one of the reasons I became so interested in herbalism.
Bravo for this post, Katherine. I'm about to explore the links. I missed it when you first posted. I too find the old botanical illustrations the most fascinating.
ReplyDeleteI was just looking for old botanical illustrations, and now I have a whole library at my fingertips, thanks to you!
ReplyDelete