Date of Printing: 1767-76 • Medium: Copperplate Engraving (hand colored) • Subject Category: Natural History - Birds • Signed: Unsigned • Period Created: Enlightenment (1700 - 1799) • Plate Size HxWxD cm: 34.3 x 27 • Leaf Paper Size HxW cm: 36.5 x 30.4 • Style: FOLIO Original Vintage • Print on Verso: Blank on verso • Condition: Excellent • Edition Type: 1st Edition - Limited • Paper Type: Laid Paper, Watermarked • Framed: Print only
Author: Saverio Manetti; Artist: Violante Vanni & Lorenzo Lorenzi. Work: "Ornithologia Methodice Digesta at que Iconibus Aeneis ad VivumIlluminatus Ornata… / Storia naturale degli Uccelli" or A Natural History of Birds. Date: 1767-1776. Print Style: cut, Folio. Original Hand-colored Engraving. Margins have been reduced, cut to plate mark on right.
This originally hand-colored engraving is from SaverioManetti's work Storia naturale degli Uccelli or A Natural History of Birds. The prints were drawn and etched by Violante Vanni and Lorenzo Lorenzi with the text penned by Saverio Manetti. The work was published in Florence, Italy between 1767 and 1776 by F. Mouck, C. Cambiagi, and Giuseppe Vanni.
Storia naturale degli Uccelli was 'larger, better engraved and more vividly coloured thanany previous book on birds', notable for its lively posturing of the specimens whichseem to reflect 'the habits and mannerisms of contemporary Italian society' (Dance). It is "one of the half-dozen or so Great Bird Books in the collector's sense" (FineBird Books). Dance p.70; Nissen IVB 588; Wood p.450; Fine Bird Books p.10;Zimmer I, 241.
Each bird engraving shows remarkable personality and detail, many of the birds often taking on an almost human personality type. Manetti drew his work predominantly from real specimens. The work was one of the largest ornithology undertakings to that point in time.
This beautiful plate comes from "Storia naturale degli uccelli", of which Peter Dance writes "The production of its five massive folio volumes must have been one of the mostremarkable publishing ventures ever undertaken in Florence. Begun in 1767, and [based on birds taken from the collection of Giovanni Gerini], it was completed ten years later. It was larger, better engraved and more vividly coloured than any previouswork on birds, but these are not its only claim to fame. The attitudes of the birds themselves give this book its unique character. Strutting, parading, posturing, and occasionally flying....are birds whose real-life counterparts would surely disown them, and not without reason, for Manetti seems in these pictures to be depicting the human comedy, the habits and mannerisms of contemporary Italian society. His book may still be rated among the very greatest bird books, if only for its magnificent comicality" (S. Peter Dance, The Art of Natural History: Animal Illustrators and their Work. London: 1978)