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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 38

AUDUBON, John James and Rev. John BACHMAN. The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America . New York: J.J. Audubon (--V.G. Audubon), 1845-54.

Auction 10.03.2000
10.03.2000
Schätzpreis
220.000 $ - 280.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
464.500 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 38

AUDUBON, John James and Rev. John BACHMAN. The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America . New York: J.J. Audubon (--V.G. Audubon), 1845-54.

Auction 10.03.2000
10.03.2000
Schätzpreis
220.000 $ - 280.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
464.500 $
Beschreibung:

AUDUBON, John James and Rev. John BACHMAN. The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America . New York: J.J. Audubon (--V.G. Audubon), 1845-54. 3 volumes, "elephant" broadsheets (689 x 543 mm). 3 lithographic title-pages and 3 pages of letterpress contents (volume I title spotted, slight discoloration to sheet edges, volumes II and III titles lightly offset, volume II contents leaf with soft vertical crease, volume III contents leaf with long vertical crease/tear repaired verso). 150 hand-colored lithographic plates after John James and John Woodhouse Audubon the backgrounds after Victor Audubon, by J.T. Bowen (plate CXXIX misnumbered CXXIV, plate II with soft horizontal crease, plate XXV with soft vertical crease, plate XXVI with two soft diagonal creases extending from lower sheet edge, plate XXXI with heavier pale spotting, plate XXXIX with large marginal foxmark, plate XLVIII with one inch marginal tear, skillfully repaired on verso, plate LI with hard horizontal crease and unobtrusive paper-tape repair on verso, plate LIII with soft horizontal crease, plate LVII with soft diagonal crease to lower corner, plate LXVII with scattered foxmarks, plate XCV with irregular spotting overall, plate C with soft handling creases, 26 plates with offsetting on verso, mostly pale and not affecting images on recto, 14 plates with overall pale browning, irregular to plates XXXIV, XLI, XLVI, and LXXVIII, some pale spotting). Contemporary (publisher's?) black morocco gilt, turn-ins gilt, edges gilt (retouching to scuff marks on volumes I and II, spine ends of volume II repaired, volume III very skillfully rebacked to match, some other minor restoration). Provenance : S.H. Green (stamp on titles). FIRST EDITION. A FINE SET WITH BRILLIANT COLORING, EARLY ISSUE, bound in three volumes. The later issues were often bound in two volumes, and without the title-page for volume three. These two-volume sets have inferior coloring to the three volume sets. At the same time Audubon was producing the commercially-successful octavo edition of his masterpiece, The Birds of America , he and his sons began production of The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America , an elephant folio of 150 lithographs meant to match the lavishness of the Birds . Unlike the double-elephant folio Birds , the Quadrupeds was produced entirely in the United States, making it the "largest single color plate book to be carried to a successful conclusion during the century [in this country]" (Reese). According to Reese, "By 1843 the Audubon family business was a well oiled machine, involving John James his two sons, Victor and John Woodhouse and various in-laws and friends. The octavo Birds was still in production when J.T. Bowen began to produce the plates for the elephant folio edition of the Quadrupeds , the largest successful color plate book project of 19th-century America. It took the family five years to publish 150 plates in thirty parts. The massive project was a commercial success, thanks to the close management of Victor. There were about three hundred subscribers." The book was the product of Audubon's collaboration with John Bachman, a pastor who had studied quadrupeds since he was a young man and who was recognized as an authority on the subject in the United States. Audubon knew Bachman's contribution was critical, and endeavored to convince his friend to push aside his apprehensions about the project. Audubon, ever the energetic and ferocious creator, even when, as he wrote Bachman, "My Hair are grey and I am growing old," felt that the Quadrupeds could be his last outstanding achievement in natural history. The cautious Bachman felt Audubon was hurrying a project about whose subject he felt "we have much to learn." Bachman finally relented, however, assured that the project would not be hastily produced. Bachman's one condition was that all of the expenses, and the profits, were to be the Audubons, "I am anxious to do something for the benefit of Victor and John

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 38
Auktion:
Datum:
10.03.2000
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

AUDUBON, John James and Rev. John BACHMAN. The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America . New York: J.J. Audubon (--V.G. Audubon), 1845-54. 3 volumes, "elephant" broadsheets (689 x 543 mm). 3 lithographic title-pages and 3 pages of letterpress contents (volume I title spotted, slight discoloration to sheet edges, volumes II and III titles lightly offset, volume II contents leaf with soft vertical crease, volume III contents leaf with long vertical crease/tear repaired verso). 150 hand-colored lithographic plates after John James and John Woodhouse Audubon the backgrounds after Victor Audubon, by J.T. Bowen (plate CXXIX misnumbered CXXIV, plate II with soft horizontal crease, plate XXV with soft vertical crease, plate XXVI with two soft diagonal creases extending from lower sheet edge, plate XXXI with heavier pale spotting, plate XXXIX with large marginal foxmark, plate XLVIII with one inch marginal tear, skillfully repaired on verso, plate LI with hard horizontal crease and unobtrusive paper-tape repair on verso, plate LIII with soft horizontal crease, plate LVII with soft diagonal crease to lower corner, plate LXVII with scattered foxmarks, plate XCV with irregular spotting overall, plate C with soft handling creases, 26 plates with offsetting on verso, mostly pale and not affecting images on recto, 14 plates with overall pale browning, irregular to plates XXXIV, XLI, XLVI, and LXXVIII, some pale spotting). Contemporary (publisher's?) black morocco gilt, turn-ins gilt, edges gilt (retouching to scuff marks on volumes I and II, spine ends of volume II repaired, volume III very skillfully rebacked to match, some other minor restoration). Provenance : S.H. Green (stamp on titles). FIRST EDITION. A FINE SET WITH BRILLIANT COLORING, EARLY ISSUE, bound in three volumes. The later issues were often bound in two volumes, and without the title-page for volume three. These two-volume sets have inferior coloring to the three volume sets. At the same time Audubon was producing the commercially-successful octavo edition of his masterpiece, The Birds of America , he and his sons began production of The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America , an elephant folio of 150 lithographs meant to match the lavishness of the Birds . Unlike the double-elephant folio Birds , the Quadrupeds was produced entirely in the United States, making it the "largest single color plate book to be carried to a successful conclusion during the century [in this country]" (Reese). According to Reese, "By 1843 the Audubon family business was a well oiled machine, involving John James his two sons, Victor and John Woodhouse and various in-laws and friends. The octavo Birds was still in production when J.T. Bowen began to produce the plates for the elephant folio edition of the Quadrupeds , the largest successful color plate book project of 19th-century America. It took the family five years to publish 150 plates in thirty parts. The massive project was a commercial success, thanks to the close management of Victor. There were about three hundred subscribers." The book was the product of Audubon's collaboration with John Bachman, a pastor who had studied quadrupeds since he was a young man and who was recognized as an authority on the subject in the United States. Audubon knew Bachman's contribution was critical, and endeavored to convince his friend to push aside his apprehensions about the project. Audubon, ever the energetic and ferocious creator, even when, as he wrote Bachman, "My Hair are grey and I am growing old," felt that the Quadrupeds could be his last outstanding achievement in natural history. The cautious Bachman felt Audubon was hurrying a project about whose subject he felt "we have much to learn." Bachman finally relented, however, assured that the project would not be hastily produced. Bachman's one condition was that all of the expenses, and the profits, were to be the Audubons, "I am anxious to do something for the benefit of Victor and John

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 38
Auktion:
Datum:
10.03.2000
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
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