ANTIQUE PRINTS
Pierre-Joseph REDOUTE (French, 1759-1840)
Title: "Lonicera Pyrenaica (Pyrenean honeysuckle)"
(No. 15, page 53)
Portfolio: Traité des Arbres et Arbustes que l'on
Cultive en France en Pleine Terre
Year: 1801-1819 (Second edition)
Medium: Original Stipple Engraving with Printed
and Hand-Coloring
Limited edition: Unknown
Sheet size: 20.94" x 13.57"
Image size: 11.75" x 8.75"
Price: $600
Pierre-Joseph Redouté (10 July 1759 – 19 June 1840), was a painter and botanist from Belgium, known for his watercolours of
roses, lilies and other flowers at the Château de Malmaison, many of which were published as large coloured stipple engravings.
He was nicknamed "the Raphael of flowers" and has been called the greatest botanical illustrator of all time.
Redouté was an official court artist of Marie Antoinette, and continued painting through the French Revolution and Reign of
Terror. He survived the turbulent political upheaval to gain international recognition for his precise renderings of plants,
which remain as fresh in the early 21st Century as when first painted. He combined great artistic skills with a pleasing and
ingratiating personality which assisted him with his influential patrons. After Queen Marie-Antoinette, his patrons included
both of Napoleon's wives – Empress Joséphine and Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma – as well as Maria Amalia of Naples and
Sicily, wife of Louis Philippe I, the last king of France.
Redouté collaborated with the greatest botanists of his day and participated in nearly fifty publications depicting both the
familiar flowers of the French court and plants from places as distant as Japan, America, South Africa, and Australia. He worked
from live plants rather than herbarium specimens, which contributed to his fresh subtle renderings. He was painting during a
period in botanical illustration (1798 – 1837) that is noted for the publication of outstanding folio editions with colored plates.
Redouté produced over 2,100 published plates depicting over 1,800 different species, many never rendered before. Of the
French botanical illustrators employed in the French capital, Redouté is the one who remains in the public consciousness
today. He is seen as an important heir to the tradition of the Flemish and Dutch flower painters Brueghel, Ruysch, van Huysum
and de Heem.
References:
"Traité des Arbres et Arbustes que l'on Cultive en France en Pleine Terre", (1801-1819) - DeBelder 111; Dunthorne 243; Nissen
549; "Great Flower Books" page 55; Stafleu & Cowan 1544; Stock 1669; Pritzel 2470
FINE ART INVESTMENTS SINCE 1978
Title: "Jasminum officinale (Common jasmine)"
(No. 27, page 93)
Portfolio: Traité des Arbres et Arbustes que l'on
Cultive en France en Pleine Terre
Year: 1801-1819 (Second edition)
Medium: Original Stipple Engraving with Printed
and Hand-Coloring
Limited edition: Unknown
Sheet size: 20.75" x 13.44"
Image size: 12.13" x 9.07"
Price: $600