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Auction archive: Lot number 29

Lionel Rothschild and John Keulemans | Album of drawings of cassowaries, together with their printed book on the subject

Estimate
£15,000 - £20,000
ca. US$20,829 - US$27,772
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 29

Lionel Rothschild and John Keulemans | Album of drawings of cassowaries, together with their printed book on the subject

Estimate
£15,000 - £20,000
ca. US$20,829 - US$27,772
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Rothschild, Lionel Walter, Baron Rothschild and John Gerrard Keulemans An album of original watercolour drawings of Cassowaries, titled in manuscript "Kasuare | Walter Rothschild | London | 1899" Oblong octavo (212 x 285mm.), black ink calligraphic manuscript title, manuscript map in blue ink of New Guinea, northern extremities of Australia and the surrounding islands, hand-coloured with a related key beneath to show the distribution of the various species and sub-species, 7 plates of pen-and-ink and watercolour drawings by Keulemans of various species of cassowary (the first five plates each with three heads, the sixth plate with two heads and the final plate with a fine full-length study of an adult and a young bird), loosely inserted is an early manuscript listing (in the same hand as the captioning of the plates and the index to the map) of various species of the bird, with common names and locations, contemporary brown morocco-backed cloth-covered boards, dark red morocco box Idem. A Monograph of the Genus Casuarius. London, 1900, extract from the Transactions of the Zoological Society of London, vol. 15, part 5, pp.109-290, 4to (304 x 241mm.), 24 plates (18 hand-coloured lithographed plates of birds, 2 hand-coloured lithographed maps and 3 photolithographed plates), contemporary blue buckram, original blue wrappers bound in PRE-PUBLICATION PRESENTATION MANUSCRIPT WITH WATERCOLOUR DRAWINGS depicting the 17 species or sub-species of cassowary identified by Rothschild in his "Monograph of the genus Casuarius" published in 1900. In December 1900, Walter Rothschild published his seminal work on the cassowary in the Transactions of the Zoological Society, which included exquisite plates by John Gerrard Keulemans. The manuscript title of the present album, however, is dated the year prior. Keulemans worked from the live birds housed in Lord Rothschild's private menagerie at Tring and travelled to Germany to sketch the live specimens at the Zoological Gardens of Berlin. This, allied with Otto Fockelmann's name on the title may provide the most likely explanation for the existence of this unique pre-publication manuscript. Rothschild was scouring the world for any species or sub-species that had escaped his notice. The Fockelmanns were well-known dealers in rare birds, based in Hamburg, and they would have been contacted to ask if they could help, perhaps by Keulemans at Rothschild's request during one of his trips to Germany. Before the publication of the monograph, the original watercolours were the most accurate method of recording the species that Rothschild had already identified, and the present images may, in part, have been produced to allow the Fockelmanns to eliminate them from Rothschild's "shopping list". The Fockelmanns were evidently much taken with the drawings, as it seems likely that they were responsible for its current final form: with a German title, a map with German place names, and a loosely inserted index (with Rothschild's name spelled incorrectly, and notes in German) with additional species which had been identified by Anton Reichenow added in 1913. LITERATURE: Anker 547; Nissen IVB 796; Wood p.543

Auction archive: Lot number 29
Auction:
Datum:
27 Apr 2021 - 13 May 2021
Auction house:
Sotheby's
London
Beschreibung:

Rothschild, Lionel Walter, Baron Rothschild and John Gerrard Keulemans An album of original watercolour drawings of Cassowaries, titled in manuscript "Kasuare | Walter Rothschild | London | 1899" Oblong octavo (212 x 285mm.), black ink calligraphic manuscript title, manuscript map in blue ink of New Guinea, northern extremities of Australia and the surrounding islands, hand-coloured with a related key beneath to show the distribution of the various species and sub-species, 7 plates of pen-and-ink and watercolour drawings by Keulemans of various species of cassowary (the first five plates each with three heads, the sixth plate with two heads and the final plate with a fine full-length study of an adult and a young bird), loosely inserted is an early manuscript listing (in the same hand as the captioning of the plates and the index to the map) of various species of the bird, with common names and locations, contemporary brown morocco-backed cloth-covered boards, dark red morocco box Idem. A Monograph of the Genus Casuarius. London, 1900, extract from the Transactions of the Zoological Society of London, vol. 15, part 5, pp.109-290, 4to (304 x 241mm.), 24 plates (18 hand-coloured lithographed plates of birds, 2 hand-coloured lithographed maps and 3 photolithographed plates), contemporary blue buckram, original blue wrappers bound in PRE-PUBLICATION PRESENTATION MANUSCRIPT WITH WATERCOLOUR DRAWINGS depicting the 17 species or sub-species of cassowary identified by Rothschild in his "Monograph of the genus Casuarius" published in 1900. In December 1900, Walter Rothschild published his seminal work on the cassowary in the Transactions of the Zoological Society, which included exquisite plates by John Gerrard Keulemans. The manuscript title of the present album, however, is dated the year prior. Keulemans worked from the live birds housed in Lord Rothschild's private menagerie at Tring and travelled to Germany to sketch the live specimens at the Zoological Gardens of Berlin. This, allied with Otto Fockelmann's name on the title may provide the most likely explanation for the existence of this unique pre-publication manuscript. Rothschild was scouring the world for any species or sub-species that had escaped his notice. The Fockelmanns were well-known dealers in rare birds, based in Hamburg, and they would have been contacted to ask if they could help, perhaps by Keulemans at Rothschild's request during one of his trips to Germany. Before the publication of the monograph, the original watercolours were the most accurate method of recording the species that Rothschild had already identified, and the present images may, in part, have been produced to allow the Fockelmanns to eliminate them from Rothschild's "shopping list". The Fockelmanns were evidently much taken with the drawings, as it seems likely that they were responsible for its current final form: with a German title, a map with German place names, and a loosely inserted index (with Rothschild's name spelled incorrectly, and notes in German) with additional species which had been identified by Anton Reichenow added in 1913. LITERATURE: Anker 547; Nissen IVB 796; Wood p.543

Auction archive: Lot number 29
Auction:
Datum:
27 Apr 2021 - 13 May 2021
Auction house:
Sotheby's
London
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