Description: Stunning 1848 Hand-Printed Stone Chromolithograph from: FLORE DES SERRES ET JARDINS DE L'EUROPE SOLANDRA LAEVIS Hook This lavish lithograph is part of a grouping I'm listing of some of the most dramatic, brilliantly colored, striking, double-fold-out prints ever made in the realm of botanical prints. They are mind-blowingly brilliant, with the colors fairly leaping off the page. The detail work & the composition are powerful, the scale of the larger prints eye-catching. These make wonderful, brilliant wall-art when framed. The Volumes:Flore des Serres et des Jardins de l'Europe (French for Flowers of the Greenhouses and Gardens of Europe) (1845–1888) was one of the finest horticulture journals produced in Europe during the 19th century, spanning 23 volumes and over 2000 colored plates with French, German and English text. Founded by Louis Benoit van Houtte (1810 - 1876) and edited together with Charles Antoine Lemaire and Michael Joseph François Scheidweiler, it was a showcase for lavish hand-finished engravings and lithographs depicting and describing botanical curiosities and treasures from around the world.The work is remarkable for the level of colour-printing craftmanship displayed by the Belgian lithographers Guillaume Severeyns, Louis-Constantin Stroobant, and Pieter De Pannemaker.Stroobant printed many of the illustrations for the first 10 volumes. Most of the plants depicted in Flore des Serres were available for sale in van Houtte's nursery, so that in a sense the journal doubled as a catalogue. The Plates:Lithography was first invented in 1796 in Germany, and came to the United States about 1819. Lithographs were created by drawing an image onto a smooth stone, usually limestone, treated with chemicals, and then printed on paper. “Lithography, as we understand it today, is the art of printing from a perfectly flat stone, on which the pattern is neither raised in relief nor cut in intaglio. The lithographic stone, which is an amorphous limestone, dense in texture whitout being hard, …[and] has a great affinity for fat. … The drawing on the stone is made with the lithographic crayon, consisting of soap, wax and lampblack, … The drawing, when finished, undergoes an operation called technically ‘the preparation.’ It consists in flowing over the face of the stone the gum Arabic solution acidulated with nitric acid. The acid neutralizes the alkali of the soup in the crayon and ink, sets the fat free, and in doing so creates a permanent union of this fat with the stone by forming lime soap, insoluble in water.” (New York Tribune) This print was printed from stone by hand from multiple stones, & often these were finished by hand with additional watercolor.Condition: Appears to be in very good condition for a print this old. Typical age-toning & character for a print this old. Overall looks to me to be a generally clean copy with the typical character for a plate of this age. Folds as issued. Please peruse the detailed photos. These prints are very old & may have minor imperfections expected with age, such as some typical age-toning of the paper, oxidation of the old original watercolors, spots, text-offsetting, artifacts from having been bound into a book, etc. Please examine the photos & details carefully.Text Page(s): This one comes with original text page(s). I've added a scan of a sample cover page from one of the volumes of the series to the listing photos for reference, they're not part of the listing.About this beautiful plant:Now known as Solandra longiflora, the showy chalicevine, Chalice Flower, Chalice vine, or papaturra, is a member of the nightshade (Solanaceae) genus Solandra and, like the other members of the genus, is a climbing plant with large, attractive, trumpet-shaped flowers.It is native to Central America and northern South America and is widely grown in the tropics as an ornamental.This perennial liana (climbing vine) grows rapidly, reaching up to 30 metres in its natural setting. It climbs up into forest trees using the strength of the trees’ branch framework as support. The large, creamy-yellow chalice-shaped flowers are highly scented, though short lived. The shape of the flower amplifies the scent, and it is best experienced in the late evening or night.Size: 13-1/4" x 9-1/4" approximately.Shipping: Multiple prints combine into one USPS Flat-Rate envelope. If you'd like to combine & need more time to choose, please send a message & we'll do our best to oblige. If you're assessed multiple shipping for one combined package, we'll endeavor to refund any overage asap. Thanks for Visiting!
Price: 29.5 USD
Location: Great Barrington, Massachusetts
End Time: 2024-10-05T20:43:37.000Z
Shipping Cost: 10.15 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Van Houtte
Signed By: Van Houtteano
Image Orientation: Portrait
Size: Folio
Signed: Yes
Material: Paper
Region of Origin: Paris, France
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Subject: Botanical, Still Life, Natural History, Botany, Gardening, Geranium
Type: Original Color Lithograph Print
Year of Production: 1848
Item Height: 13-1/4"
Style: Natural History
Theme: History, Natural History, Nature, Science & Medicine, Botany, Botanical, Van Houtte, Flora, Flowers
Features: 1st Edition
Production Technique: Stone Chromolithograph
Country/Region of Manufacture: France
Handmade: Yes
Item Width: 9-1/4"
Time Period Produced: 1850-1899