Brodtmann Natural History Studies
Lion, Elephant, Rhinoceros Lithographs
Details below
Female Lion

Female Lion
Latin: Felis Leo Faemmina
German: Die Lowinn
Plate Number 22
11 x 15.5 inches, image, approximate

Female Asiatic Elephant

Female Asiatic Elephant
Latin: Elephantus Indicus Faemina
German: Der asiatische Elephant Das Weibchen
Plate Number 52
10 x 15.5 inches, image, approximate

One-horned Rhinoceros

One-horned Rhinoceros
Latin: Rhinoceros unicornis
German: Das einhornige Nashorn
Plate Number 53
9.25 x 14.5 inches, image, approximate
Condition: Very good with faint soiling.

Asian Rhinoceros

Asian Rhinoceros
Latin: Rhinoceros unicornis
German: Das asiatische Nashorn
Plate Number 55
8 x 12.5 inches, image, approximate

Rhinoceros

Rhinoceros
Latin: Rhinoceros unicornus
German: Das einhornige Nashorn
Plate Number 54
10 x 13 inches, image, approximate
Condition: Very good, scattered chipping along top edge.

Detail of Female Lion Detail of Female Asiatic Elephant
Detail of One-horned Rhinoceros Detail of Rhinoceros Detail of Asian Rhinoceros
Karl Joseph Brodtmann (1787-1862) (artist and lithographer)
Naturhistorische Bilder Gallerie aus dem Theirreiche
[Natural History Picture Gallery of the Animal Kingdom]

Zürich or Schaffhausen: c. 1830s
Hand-colored lithographs
14 x 17.5 inches, sheet
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Plates of jungle animals - elephant, lion, and rhinoceros -- each sensitively rendered with attention to scientific detail. They are from a series of prints of the animal kingdom, including also monkeys, horses, reptiles, butterflies and insects. Some plates in the series also depict indigenous peoples. As was typical of 18th and early 19th century natural history studies, the animals are generally shown on a patch of landscape against a white background. These lithographs are early examples of educational natural history books about the animal kingdom, a genre which remained popular throughout the 19th century. They are also early examples of lithographic printing, which had been introduced by German inventor Alois Senefelder in the 1790s.

Karl Joseph Brodtmann was one of the most accomplished lithographers of his day, as well as a printseller and bookseller who lived in Zurich and Schaffhausen, Switzerland. His natural history lithographs include Heinrich Rudolf Schinz's natural history volumes on reptiles and birds, published in the early 1830s. Brodtmann also produced the offered folio natural history lithographs, probably also in the 1830s, as Naturhistorische Bilder Gallerie aus dem Theirreiche.

Reference:

Bénézit, E. Dictionnaire critique et documentaire des Peintres, Sculpteurs, Dessinateurs et Graveurs. France: Librairie Gründ, 1966. Vol. 2, p. 146.