George Edwards
18th Century Bird Prints
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Yellow Breasted Toucan Pl. 329

Plate 329

The Green Toucan Pl. 330

Plate 330

Le Perroquet Brunatre CLXVII

Plate 167

Le Perroquet a Tete de Faulcon CLXV

Plate 165

Le Perroquet Verd du Bresil CLXI

Plate 161

Le Grand Perroquet Verd de Indes Occidentales CLXII

Plate 162

Le Lory Ecarlate CLXXII

Plate 172

Le Petit Perroquet Verd CLXVIII

Plate 168

Le Grand Cacatua Pl. 160

Plate 160

The Little Dusky Parrot, Pl. 315

Plate 315

The Great Black Cockatoo

Plate 316

Leffer White Cockatoo With Yellow Creft, Pl. 317

Plate 317

George Edwards (1694-1773)
Natural History Studies of Birds
from A Natural History of Uncommon Birds, and of some other Rare and Undescribed Animals, Quadrapeds, Reptiles, Fishes, Insects, &c.
London: T. Rickaby for George Edwards, London, 1743-51
or from Gleanings of Natural History Containing Figures of Quadrupeds, Birds, Insects, Plants, &c.
G. Sidney for George Edwards, London, 1758-1764
Hand-colored engravings
12 x 9.5 inches each (average approximate size overall)
Prices vary: $300 to $900 each, many others available

George Edwards (1694-1773)
To see other Edwards natural history prints of animals on our site, use our site search engine.

Bird prints from one of the most important and comprehensive of all English 18th century natural history works by one of the foremost ornithologists of the day.  For the most part, the prints from these series depict a broad spectrum of birds, including species native to Great Britain and Europe, as well as exotic tropical birds such as parrots and toucans.  Each is rendered in a scientific manner, distinctly 18th century in conception and style, generally with a tree branch, or the ground or water from the bird's habitat.  Some of the more decorative bird prints incorporate other animals, such as fluttering butterflies, insects, reptiles or mammals.  Though Edwards was primarily an ornithologist, he also depicted other animals (by themselves without a bird), including reptiles, amphibians, fish and mammals. The most notable of his mammal studies are the monkeys and lemurs. View Edwards monkey prints.

Edwards’ natural history prints were issued in two works, now generally considered a unified one.  Plates 1 to 210, birds and animals, were published in A Natural History of Uncommon Birds (1743-1751).  Plates 211 to 362, which added more birds and animals, were published in Gleanings of Natural History (1758-1764).  These works were both reissued in 1805-06, with fine coloring that some contemporary scholars even viewed as an improvement over the earlier editions.  In the late 18th century, translations of Edwards’ works also appeared in French, German and Dutch.  Another work with an engraved portrait of Edwards, Memoirs of the Life and Works of George Edwards, was published in 1776.

George Edwards was born in Essex, England.  He studied art in Holland, but found his true vocation in 1718, when he traveled to Norway and studied the birds that lived on the rocks and in precipices there. With the materials he had collected, he applied himself to the study of natural history, making colored drawings of birds and animals, and continued his studies in Holland.  Edwards also mastered etching with the assistance of the leading 18th Century British natural history artist Mark Catesby (1683-1749) In the mid 18th Century, Edwards published A Natural History of Uncommon Birds (1743-1751), followed by its continuation work Gleanings of Natural History (1758-1764), collectively having 362 prints of birds and animals in natural settings.

Edwards made considerable contributions to the study of birds, and held numerous positions as a scholar and scientist.  Indeed, he is generally considered the father of modern British ornithology.  In 1733, he was appointed as Librarian at the Royal College of Physicians. Edwards also served as secretary to Sir Hans Sloane, who had a private museum and was president of the college and of the Royal Society.  Edwards was honored with the Gold Medal of the Royal Society and elected a Fellow.  Edwards’ descriptions and pictures of birds provided reference material for the renowned Swedish biologist Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778), who gave scientific names to 350 bird species described by Edwards. 

Condition:  Generally very good with the usual overall light toning and wear.  Some with minor faint scattered occasional soiling, foxing, offsetting.  Prints presumed from 18th Century edition, though conceivably from 1805-06 reissue.

References:

Pasquier, Roger F.  and Farrand, John Jr.  Masterpieces of Bird Art: 700 Years of Ornithological Illustration.  New York: Abbeville Press, 1991.  pp. 62-67.

Redgrave, Samuel. A Dictionary of Artists of the English School: Painters, Sculptors, Architects, Engravers and Ornamentists. London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1874. p. 134.

See also: Anker 124-26; Fine Bird Books (1990) p.93; Lisney pp.128-44; Mullens & Swann p.195; Nissen IVB 286-88; Zimmer pp. 192-98.

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