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| Cancer (The Crab) |
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| Hydra, Corvus and the Crater |
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John Bevis (1695-1771) (after) |
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British celestial prints showing the constellations well delineated in pictorial style based on figures in classical mythology as identified by Ptolemy, and with later identified constellations of the southern hemisphere comprised of scientific and animals. These prints were designed in the 1740s by John Bevis, a British physician and astronomer who made important celestial observations and was eventually elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1765. Bevis' images, based on the earlier celestial atlases by Johannes Bayer (1603) and John Flamsteed (1729), surpass both those works in the quality of the artwork and scientific accuracy. Each print from this series is dedicated to one of the subscribers who initially underwrote the production of the work, individuals and learned societies from Britain and elsewhere in Europe. Apparently no expense was spared in the production, as evidenced by the superb craftsmanship. Although printed around 1749-1750, they were not issued until 1786, many years after Bevis’ death.
Hydra, Corvus and the Crater: The three constellations otherwise known as the Female Watersnake, the Crow and the Beaker are depicted above a small portion of Centaurus. Dedication: "To Sir James Creed Knight. F. R. S. This Table is most humbly Inscib’d." Bevis’ atlas was announced for subscription in 1748 as Uranographia Britannica, updating and improving the accuracy of information provided in earlier atlases by Bayer and Flamsteed, and with plates designed to be easy to consult at the telescope. The charts also incorporated discoveries by astronomers such as Hevelius and Halley, and included several nebulae and celestial objects for the first time in a publication, including the Crab Nebula, discovered by Bevis himself. 51 plates had been engraved and printed when the bankruptcy of the publisher, John Neale, brought an abrupt end to the project in 1750, an everlasting disappointment to Bevis. In 1785, the existing plates for Uranographia Britannica were sold at an auction of his estate, and the following year re-emerged bound into sets by an anonymous entrepreneur under the title Atlas Celeste, with no title page or explanatory text, nor any mention of Bevis or Neale. The atlas was rare, even when first published. As of 2003, only 23 sets were known, not all of them with the full complement of 51 plates, probably because the 1786 seller did not have equal numbers of all the prints (Kilburn et al). Another Bevis celestial, from the collection of the George Glazer Gallery, appears in the book You Are Here by Katharine Harmon, New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2004, p. 70. Condition (Cancer): Generally very good with the usual overall light toning and wear. Margins probably cut, but still ample beyond platemark. Color good, possibly enhanced at a later date. Reference: Kilburn, Kevin, Jay M. Pasachoff and Owen Gingerich. “The Forgotten Star Atlas: John Bevis’s Uranographia Brittanica.” Journal of the History of Astronomy 34 (2003): 125-144. |
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