Description: 1834 Exquisite, Scarce, Large-Paper Edition, Hand-Colored Seashell Stipple Engraving from Kiener's SPÉCIES GÉNÉRAL ET ICONOGRAPHIE DES COQUILLES VIVANTES Par L. C. KIENER PHASIANELLE (Phasianella) Pl. 27 I'm listing a series of seven large, folio-sized shell engravings. This large, exquisitely detailed engraving comes from one of the most beautiful shell books ever made: Spécies Général et Iconographie des Coquilles Vivantes.I'm not certain of the origins of these very unusual large-paper versions of what are usually seen as octavo bookplates, per some other listings from this work I've posted. Perhaps these were for a deluxe, folio version of the volumes, or perhaps they were proof-plates done on large paper.In any case, they are remarkable, I've not seen any this size before nor since. Their size makes them especially grand for framed wall art. The Author: Louis Charles Kiener (31 July 1799 – 24 July 1881) was a French malacologist born in Paris.He was the author of the 12-volume Spécies général et iconographie des coquilles vivantes. As a naturalist & conchologist, Kiener named & described numerous species of molluscs. The Artist: Louis Joseph Édouard Maubert (30 January 1806 Calais – 30 April 1879 Paris) was a prolific French natural history illustrator, who contributed to botanical books and horticultural journals, working with botanists such as Jean-Louis-Auguste Loiseleur-Deslongchamps, Charles Antoine Lemaire, Charles Henry Dessalines d'Orbigny, Hippolyte François Jaubert and Jean Jules Linden.Maubert trained under the watercolor painter Louis Francia, and settled in Paris around 1836. He improved his skills with Pierre Joseph Redouté at the Museum of Natural History. His training and talent gained him access to scientific circles within the Museum of Natural History. He painted flowers until the day before his death in his Parisian apartment at 15 rue de Buffon in the 5th arrondissement. The Volumes:Full title of this work is Spécies Général et Iconographie des Coquilles Vivantes, comprenant la collection du Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle de Paris, la collection Lamarck, celle du Prince Masséna et les découvertes récentes des Voyageurs (Translation: General Species and Iconography of Living Shells, including the collection of the Natural History Museum of Paris, the Lamarck collection, that of Prince Masséna and the recent discoveries of the Voyagers). Produced in Paris between 1834 & 1879, in 11 volumes (bound in 12).Kiener made use of the famous Delessert collection and that of the Natural History Museum of Paris, together the largest and most varied fund of conchological material on the continent. "He soon put it to good use; and in 1834 he published the first part of his 'Spécies .' This exquisitely illustrated iconography, started before the Sowerby and Reeve began to issue theirs, appeared at intervals up to 1879, when eleven volumes had been completed. The Technique: Hand colored stipple engraving.The printing method, called 'Intaglio', is similar to the way etchings are made, but requires consummate craft of a master metalworker who engraves every line & shading into the metal with a sharp steel point, faithfully following the original watercolor painting which the plate is to reproduce. Usually the metal was copper, but using much harder steel allows finer detail.It's a process which could take many months for one plate. Once complete, ink is rubbed into the incised & stipples, while the rest of the plate is wiped clean, leaving only the engraved depressions inked.The plate is then run through a hand-cranked press, together with the sheet of paper to be printed, between rollers under high pressure. The paper is forced into the engraved lines to pick up the ink in each fine groove, transferring ink to paper, resulting in a reproduced image of unparalleled precision & clarity.Needless to say, every part of these prints was made by hand: Hand drawn & engraved on hand-mined, smelted & rolled copper, printed onto handmade cotton rag paper, inked & colored with hand-ground pigments. About These Gorgeous Creatures:Phasianella, common name the pheasant shells, is a genus of small sea snails with a calcareous operculum and a colorfully patterned shell, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Phasianellidae.The species in this genus occur in the tropical Indo-West Pacific and off Australia. Condition: These appear to be in generally good condition with some age-toning to the paper & other character typical of prints this age. Some have some minor staining, some are near pristine. The detail & hand-coloring remains sharp & beautiful as the day it was printed. Quite glorious to my eye.These prints are very old & may have typical minor imperfections expected with age & the handmade paper & technique, artifacts from having been bound into volumes, etc. Please examine the photos & details carefully.Dimensions: Approximately 13-1/4 by 10-1/4 inches Text Page(s): I don't possess the text page(s) for these. Included in the photos is a scan of title page from one of the volumes for reference which is not part of the listing. Shipping: This one will go in a medium flat-rate box with stiffeners. Additional prints can be combined at no extra shipping cost. In case eBay charges additional shipping for additional prints, we will reimburse & credit any shipping overages through eBay. Thanks for Visiting!
Price: 69 USD
Location: Great Barrington, Massachusetts
End Time: 2024-09-24T23:01:04.000Z
Shipping Cost: 15 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Maubert
Signed By: Maubert p.t
Image Orientation: Portrait
Size: Folio
Signed: Yes
Material: Paper
Region of Origin: Europe
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Subject: Zoology, Animals, Shells, Seashells, Coquilles, Conchology, Malacology
Type: Hand-Colored Copperplate Stipple Engraving
Year of Production: 1834
Item Height: 13-1/4"
Style: Natural History
Theme: Animals, Natural History, Nature, Conchology, Shells
Features: 1st Edition
Production Technique: Stipple Engraving
Country/Region of Manufacture: France
Handmade: Yes
Item Width: 10-1/4"
Time Period Produced: 1800-1849