Sherman Foote Denton (1856-1837) (after)
Game Fish
from
Third Annual Report of the Commissioners of Fisheries, Game
and Forests of the State of New York.
Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co., New York and Albany: 1898
Chromolithographs
8.25 x 11.25 inches, overall
Red Tag Price: $125 to $250 each
Collection of game fish studies documenting various species throughout the state
of New York . The titles of the prints specify common and scientific
names. Some also provide the name of the lake in which the fish was
found. All have the artist's signature, lower left, " Denton." These
prints set the standard for natural history fish illustration.
This edition contains the following images:
Common Whitefish Male from Canandaigua Lake [Coregonus Clupeiformis.
Mitchill.]
Alewife or Branch Herring [Pomolobus Pseudoharengus]
Golden Shiner or Bream [Abramis Crysoleucas. Mitchill.]
Steelhead or Salmon Trout [Salmo Gairdneri. Richardson.]
Red Throat, Black Spotted or Rocky Mountain Trout [Salmo Mykiss. Walbaum.]
Common Whitefish Female from Hemlock Lake [Coregonus Clupeiformis. Mitchill.]
Cisco from Hemlock Lake [Argyrosomus Artedi. Le Sueur.]
Fall Fish or Silver Chub [Semotilus Bullaris. Rafineque.]
White Bass [Roccus Chrysops. Rafinesque.]
Sherman Foote Denton provided the watercolor illustrations for some 100 chromolithographs
documenting various species of North American fish and a few of other
wildlife for the State of New York Fisheries, Game, and Forest
Commission's Annual Reports from 1895 to 1909. The State of
New York illustrations are widely admired for their detail and color
to this day. Denton was a Renaissance man: naturalist, traveler, artist,
entrepreneur, collector, inventor and author. His interest in natural
history encompassed not only fish, but butterflies and moths, insects,
birds, fossils, freshwater pearls and gems. During the 1880s, he and
his brothers went on trips to the Western U.S. and accompanied their
father, a geologist, on an expedition to Australia, New Zealand and
New Guinea, where collected natural history specimens. Returning to
the U.S., Denton worked as an artist for the United States Fish Commission
at the Smithsonian Institute between 1896 and 1890, where he illustrated
their reports and also developed and patented a method for mounting
fish without losing the natural colors. He became the leading maker
of fish models for collectors and museums such as the Smithsonian, the
Field Museum in Chicago and the Agassiz Museum at Harvard. He also invented
a method for mounting butterflies, and amassed the most important collection
of freshwater pearls in the U.S.
Condition: Generally very good with the usual light overall toning and little to no wear.
References:
"Sherman Denton , Naturalist, Dead." Boston Herald American. June 25, 1937. http://dentons.acun.com/Sherman%20F.%20Denton.pdf (12 March 2004).
Steinhacker, Charles. "The Fish Prints of S.F. Denton." The American Fly Fisher. Vol. 20, No. 3. Summer 1994. pp. 10-13. http://dentons.acun.com/Sherman%20F.%20Denton.pdf (12 March 2004).