The Birds of America

by John James Audubon

Other authorsWilliam Vogt (Foreword)
Hardcover, 1941

Call number

598 A (TOP SHELF)

Collection

Publication

The Macmillan Company (1941), Edition: Reprint in 1941, 435 pages

Description

First published in installments between 1827 and 1838, John James Audubon's collection of life-sized watercolors of North American birds is the standard against which all wildlife illustration is measured. Fewer than 120 copies survive today, locked away in museums and private collections around the world. For this volume, the Natural History Museum in London disbound one of the two original editions it owns, and each of the 435 exquisite hand-colored prints of the original watercolours were photographed using the latest digital scanning technology. From an avocet grazing in a tidal pond to a zenaida dove perched on a flowering branch, each of Audubon's subjects is depicted with the grace and beauty of a living bird in its natural habitat. An avid outdoorsman and explorer, Audubon traveled from Florida to Labrador to Texas and the Dakotas to study and collect his specimens. Straddling the line between science and art, this book mesmerized 19th-century audiences around the world; today it stands as a reminder of the spectacular biodiversity of the North American continent, and of the pioneer spirit that Audubon himself revered. --… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Archivist13
I work for the Academy of Natural sciences in Philadelphia, where we turn the page daily on our copy of the Elephant Edition, so this particular version pales, but still a great book for the collection.
LibraryThing member philipdhinakar
This book was published by Audubon himself (Antique)
LibraryThing member jamesjarrett00
Collection of original Audubon artwork presented for a new generation, 70 years ago. The introduction gives a short history of bird conservation from Audubon's time until the publishing of this work. It shows that conservation discussions haven't changed much in the last 70+ years. It is enjoyable
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looking at the great artwork and comparing it to more modern art. I recommend this for anyone interested in art and/or ornithology.
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Pages

435
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