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Natural History Art, Marine Life, Coral, Shells, Starfish, Knorr, Delights of Nature, Antique Prints, 1766

Georg Wolfgang Knorr (1705-1761), J.L. Colve, B. R. Dietzschin, Christian Leinberger, J.C. Keller,
C.N. Kleeman et al. (after)
Jakob-Andreas Eisenmann, J.S. Leitner, Jr., Andreas Hoffer, Georg Wolfgang Knorr et al. (engravers)
Sea Life Studies
from Deliciae Naturae Selectae Oder Auserlefenes Natüralien-Cabinet
[Selected Delights of Nature, or the Exquisite Collector’s Cabinet]

Heirs of G.W. Knorr, Nuremberg, Germany: c. 1766-67
Hand-colored engravings
19.5 x 13.5, overall
13.5 x 10.5, platemark
Priced individually.  To view price click magnifying glass in upper right of each image.

To see other Knorr natural history prints on our site, including birds and mammals, search our site.

Colorful natural history prints of marine life, from a series that includes mammals, reptiles and birds. Among the animals were species considered exotic by Europeans. They include starfish, coral, starfish, seashells, etc. These prints were created during the heyday of the collector’s cabinet and are very much in the spirit of the Enlightenment: see our online article, Collector’s Cabinets of Curiosity: A Brief History.

Product Description Continues Below

Description

Some of the prints have dedications to patrons and collectors involved in the production of the prints or providing access to specimens from their collections. Those dedicated “Ex Museo Excell. Dn. D. Christ. Jac. Trew. S. S” refer to the collection of Christoph Jacob Trew, a physician and botanist and major patron of natural history artists and works. Trew is most famous for his support of botanical artist Georg Dionysius Ehret in publishing two of the finest 18th century botanical sets: Plantae Selectae and Hortus Nitidissimis. Those credited to the “Ex Museo Mulleriano” refer to the zoologist and professor Philipp Ludwig Statius Müller (1725-1776).

Georg Wolfgang Knorr was a German paleontologist, as well as a painter, draftsman, engraver, collector and art dealer. At age 18, he became a copperplate engraver for Leonhard Blanc, working with Martin Tyroff on the illustrations for Jacob Scheuchzer’s Physica Sacra (1731). Later he engraved portraits, landscapes, geological formations, and animal studies after Dürer and the Kilian family. In the second half of the 18th century, Nuremberg overtook Augsburg as the center of production for fine natural history books in Germany. There, Knorr published scientific works distinguished by their beautiful hand-colored plates. His works include two posthumous productions: Deliciae Naturae Selectae Oder Auserlefenes Naturalien Cabinet (1766-67), and Les Délices Des Yeux et de L’espirit, ou Collection Generale des Differentes Espèces de Coquillages (1764-73).

Condition: Generally very good with the usual overall toning and light edge wear.

References:

Dance, S. Peter. The Art of Natural History: Animal Illustrators and their Work. London: 1978. pp. 78 and 217.

Lanckoronska, Maria and Richard Öhler. Buchillustration Des XVIII. Jahrhunderts in Deutschland, Osterreich Und Der Schweitz: Dritter Teil. Leipzig: Die Spamer, 1934. I, 46.

Nissen, Claus. Die Zoologische Buchillustration: ihre Bibliographie und Geschichte. Stuttgart: 1969-78. 2227.

Additional information

Century

18th Century