Birds of the Enlightenment: Predecessors and Rivals of J.J. Audubon

“Each publication has a story to tell about the thought processes of those on the introductory edge of modern science. The bright engravings and lithographs that accompanied the text have a lot to tell us about the juncture between art and the natural world.” - Dr. Thomas Puryear

Curated by Dr. Thomas Puryear

OCTOBER 16, 2016 - JANUARY 31, 2017
Despite his great fame, John James Audubon was not the first to produce crisp and accurate images of birds for sale to an increasingly curious public. His monumental work was indebted to earlier artist-scientists, starting with late Italian Renaissance pioneers in ornithology to his own Victorian contemporaries. These less well-known artists, the main subject of this exhibition, were fueled by curiosity and incredible voyages of discovery. They documented and classified nature accurately, contributing to advances in both science and art. 

Guest Curator Tom Puryear has assembled a collection of over 90 woodcuts, hand-colored engravings, and lithographs from both sides of the Atlantic to reveal the many illustrated publications that preceded and then competed for attention with Audubon’s efforts.

 
 

“The prints here are very typical of what one would find in the marketplace of ideas and in bookstores in the 18th and 19th centuries,” explains Puryear. “The competition in the market prior to and following the appearance of the landmark prints of Audubon was a lively one. The desire to examine and collect the ordinary and familiar, as well as the oddities, the beautiful, the foreign and exotic was a popular notion in those years, and this exhibition re-creates that excitement for the museum guest.”