Selections from the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library
Designs from an American Woodsman
Recognized as one of the greatest undertakings
in both the art world and ornithology, Audubon's Birds of
America (1827-1838) is a testimony to nature. Even today,
more than 150 years after its completion, it remains a primary
resource for scientists and scholars. Since Audubon's time,
four species of American birds have become extinct.
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Belted Kingfisher,
plate 77, from Birds of America, 1827-1838,
38 x 25 inches,copperplate engraving from hand-colored print by John
James Audubon |
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In 1820, at the age of thirty-five, John James Audubon undertook
to capture on paper every bird native to America, "in
full size, in full color, and in natural settings." Over
the next four years he produced more than 400 watercolors
of nearly 500 species. He was called variously "madman," "naturalist," and "American
woodsman."
Audubon's methods distinguished him from other illustrators.
He often painted with both hands at the same time. More important,
he refused to work from stuffed models but preferred to position
freshly killed birds with wire, thread, wood, and cork. In
an effort to depict his specimens at their actual size and
to better gauge their proportions, he posed them against
ruled paper.
Of his famous kingfisher, Audubon wrote, "I pierced
the body of the fishing bird and fixed it on a board; another
wire passed above his upper mandible held the head in a pretty
fair attitude, smaller ones fixed the feet according to my
notions, and even common pins came to my assistance. The
last wire proved a delightful elevator to the bird's tail,
and at last there stood before me the real kingfisher."
Publishing this monumental work proved as great a challenge
as creating the original watercolors. After seeking support,
both financial and artistic, in Philadelphia and New York,
Audubon traveled to London, where he secured the services
of Robert Havell Jr., a printer and engraver. Under the supervision
of Audubon, Havell produced the four-volume, double-elephant-folio
edition on handmade paper measuring thirty-eight by twenty-five
inches. All together, the four volumes comprised 435 hand-colored
prints impressed from copperplate engravings. Duke's copy
is bound in marbled-paper-covered boards and red, straight-grain
morocco leather.
Audubon and Havell labored on their first edition from 1827
to 1838, selling the work to subscribers without text to
avoid the necessity of providing free copies to English depository
libraries. (A separate work of accompanying text, Ornithological
Biography, was produced in five volumes, 1831-1839.) They
most likely produced between 175 and 200 complete sets, of
which 125 have survived. Approximately a dozen sets remain
in private hands today.
Duke acquired its set of Birds of America in 1930, thanks
to the work of William K. Boyd, then director of the Duke
libraries. Until 1964, it was displayed in the East Campus
Library's upper galleries. The volumes are now on display
in the Mary Duke Biddle Rare Book Room at Perkins Library,
in exhibit cases built especially for them.
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