Sunday, June 12, 2011

Caribbean Nature

Ajoupas du Lagon peinier, appellé le Cirque des Bambous. (frontispiece)

-Ajoupas du Lagon peinier, appellé le Cirque des Bambous-

Description/notes: View of bamboo huts or dwellings on the island of Saint-Domingue, present-day Haiti. Also includes an alligator. The corresponding text discusses a lagoon in Saint-Domingue.



Patte de Figues bananes sur le régime terminé par la Popotte.
-Patte de Figues bananes sur le régime terminé par la Popotte-

Description/notes: Cluster (patte) or hand of bananas. The banana tree was introduced into the Caribbean by Spaniards and other Europeans in the sixteenth century. In 18th/19th century-French Caribbean, they were called 'figues'. The figue banane now refers to a small banana about 12 cm. long.



Cayman vu sous le Ventre. Fig. Iere. Son Squelette. Fig. II.
-Cayman vu sous le Ventre. Fig. Iere. Son Squelette. Fig. II.-

Description/notes: Body of a caiman* and its skeleton. The text provides extensive description of the animal, as well as charts comparing it to other members of the crocodile family.



Anatomie de la Langue, du Larinx et de la Trachée Artere du Cayman.
-Anatomie de la Langue, du Larinx et de la Trachée Artere du Cayman-

Description/notes: Diagram of the tongue, larynx and trachea of a caiman. The text provides an extensive description of the author's dissection of the animal.



a. Apocin Corne Cabrit. b. Ap. Hérissé. c. Mancelinier. d. Azédarach, e. Quebec, f. Karapaf des Poules. g. Scorpion, h. Bête à millepieds, i. et k. Areignées crabes, l. et m. Areignées à Cul rouge, n. leurs oeufs
-a. Apocin Corne Cabrit. b. Ap. Hérissé. c. Mancelinier. d. Azédarach, e. Quebec, f. Karapaf des Poules. g. Scorpion, h. Bête à millepieds, i. et k. Areignées crabes, l. et m. Areignées à Cul rouge, n. leurs oeufs-

Description/notes: Various land insects including black widow spider [?] and its eggs, scorpion, millepede, and the plants that shelter them, including the mancenillier or manchineel (Hippomane mancinella): all parts of this tree* are poisonous. [A present-day Spanish name is in fact manzanilla de la muerte, "little apple of death".]



a. Sapotille. b. le Mango. c. Cirouelles. d. Pomme rose. e. Fruit du Mombin.
-a. Sapotille. b. le Mango. c. Cirouelles. d. Pomme rose. e. Fruit du Mombin-

Description/notes: Sapodilla fruit, mango fruit, cirouelle fruit, rose apples, and a plum-like fruit known as mombin. Items are lettered for identification in adjacent text.

The sapodilla (Manilkara zapota) is native to the Yucatan and Mexico and has spread throughout the Caribbean. Its sap was used as a gum by the Maya. Mangos (Mangifera indica) are native to southern Asia. Cirouelles (Spondias purpurea) are also known as mombin rouge. The pomme rose or rose apple (Syzygium jambos) is originally from India and was introduced to Jamaica in 1762, spreading to the rest of the Caribbean from there. Mombin fruit or a kind of plum (Spondias mombin) is native to South America and common in the West Indies.



Thalie vulgt. Galère, ver zoophite de l'ordre des Molusqueae
-Thalie vulgt. Galère, ver zoophite de l'ordre des Molusqueae-

Description/notes: Sea creature, perhaps a sea cucumber. The accompanying text states that the creature was brought up in a bucket after his ship had crossed the Tropic of Cancer, perhaps off Brazil.

{Ed. As has been pointed out in the comments, this specimen is most likely a Portuguese man o'war [Physalia physali]}



Poisson de Mer . 1. l'Ostracion à bec et à deux piquans. 2. Coryphène Perroquet. 3. Spare Cardinal. 4. Bodian Vivano.
-Poisson de Mer . 1. l'Ostracion à bec et à deux piquans. 2. Coryphène Perroquet. 3. Spare Cardinal. 4. Bodian Vivano-

Description/notes: A kind of box fish, a coryphène or mahi mahi-like fish, a cardinal fish, and a bodian vivano. The text states that the box fish was not particularly tasty. The coryphène was considered a delicious fish. The cardinal fish is a small nocturnal fish of the family Apogonidae. The bodian vivano is noted for its agility. The author discusses the method used to catch the fish and the taste and preferred cooking and preserving method for each fish.



Poissons de Riviere. 1. Kyphose Haut-Dos. 2. Gobiésoce Testar 3. Mulet de l'Artibonite. 4. Ecrevisse de l'Ester 5. Ecrevisse de l'Artibonite.
-Poissons de Riviere. 1. Kyphose Haut-Dos. 2. Gobiésoce Testar 3. Mulet de l'Artibonite. 4. Ecrevisse de l'Ester 5. Ecrevisse de l'Artibonite-

Description/notes: Several fishes: a kyphose, a gobiesoce testar [Gobiesox testar], a mullet from the Artibonite river or region of Haiti, a crayfish from the area of Ester (near present-day Port-au-Prince), and a crayfish from the Artibonite river or region.

The Kyphose may be a kind of sea chub (kyphosidae); text notes the typically deformed back of the fish. The author discusses the taste and preferred cooking and preserving method for each fish.



a. le Citronier des Haies. b. Fruit de l'Abricotier.
-a. le Citronier des Haies. b. Fruit de l'Abricotier-

Description/notes: Branches and fruit of Caribbean versions of lemon and apricot trees. Text notes that the apricot was unlike the European apricot; it may be Mammea americana, the mammee apple, or St. Domingo apricot.



La Baie-à-ondes. Arbre pernicieux dans les Hattes.
-La Baie-à-ondes. Arbre pernicieux dans les Hattes-

Description/notes: Branch, thorns, seed pods, flowers, and cut trunk of the baie-à-ondes tree, perhaps a member of the genus Acacia. The scientific name for one of the Caribbean acacias is Cercidium praecox.


Chariot Funéraire.
-Chariot Funéraire-

Description/notes: Man drives a pony or horse cart filled with bones or a skeleton towards funerary pillars or pyramids. The text discusses the mourners walking two by two and following or preceding a red cart holding the corpse.


[All the image captions and notes are paraphrased or quoted from the source site]


Michel Étienne Descourtilz (1775-1835), a French naturalist, lived in Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti) during much of the revolt that led to the independence of Haiti. He had trained as a surgeon and then married into a family with plantation holdings near Port-au-Prince. He arrived in Haiti in 1798 and remained there for five years.
"Descourtilz became involved in the Negro revolution and, in spite of the protection of Toussaint L'Ouverture, was nearly executed by Dessalines. He was forced to join the medical service of the Negro army, but in 1803 he escaped and sailed to Cádiz.

His publications demonstrate the range of subjects to which he applied his botanical, zoological and medical knowledge, often in the light of his experiences as a traveller, [including:] 'Voyages d'un Naturalist' ... (Paris: 1809), 'Guide Sanitaire des Voyageurs aux Colonies' (Paris: 1816), 'Anatomia Comparée du Grand Crocodille des Antilles' (Paris: 1825), 'Des Champignons Comestibles Suspects et Vénéreux' ... (Paris: 1827), and 'De l'Impuissance et de la Stérilité' ... (Paris: 1831). [And 'Flore Pittoresque et Médicale des Antilles' ... 1827-1834]" [source]

The hand-coloured stipple engravings from 'Voyages d'un Naturalist' (Vol. 2) come from the fabulous John Carter Brown Library at Brown University. [titlepage screenshot]

Friday, June 10, 2011

Baselwear

Engravings of Swiss clothing styles from the 1630s



engraving 1634 - Basel costumes
How to admire one another in a good year



17th century Swiss fashion
Guildmaster and servants



Basler Kleidung j
Maidservants: fast mouth-work, slow housework



Basler Kleidung
Schoolmaster, teacher-assistant and student



Basler Kleidung e
Noblewomen and their maidservants going to church



Basler Kleidung a
The marriage court made up of a board member,
a clergyman and a member of the local council



Basler Kleidung b
Local aristocrats



Basler Kleidung k
A good woman beats the wine out of her drunken husband's head



Basler Kleidung d
Bridegroom and nobleman



Basler Kleidung c
Young fellows



Basler Kleidung f
A woman mourning her husband



Basler Kleidung g
Wine merchant (street crier)



Basler Kleidung h
A sexton and a heat controller (or fire stoker) announce a public auction



Basler Kleidung l
Peasants heading for the market


[All the images were spliced together from screen shots; the first image was slightly background cleaned; click through on any for an enlarged version]


Hans Heinrich Glaser (1585-1673) was an engraver from Basel in Switzerland who is best known for two volumes of fashion illustrations he produced about a decade apart. The first, from the 1620s, was copied from other illustrators.

Glaser's second book - 'Basler Kleidung', the subject of this post - was published in 1634 and remains a well regarded historical source for Basel's 17th century clothing and culture. The illustrator also exhibits a wry sense of humour at times, obviously.

'Basler Kleidung' (~Basel Fashion) is available online at the e-rara site of Universitätsbibliothek Basel (note the thumbnails link at the top of the page).

There are a couple of biographical sources around, both of which become impenetrably mangled by the online translation: One; Two.

I am grateful to typographer/designer Nina Stössinger for help with the caption translations. And, by some extraordinary coincidence, Nina is working on a project this year that includes images from this book. The odds for this must be just astronomical.

Previously: costumes.



Tangentially related: Illuminating Fashion: Dress in the Art of Medieval France and the Netherlands at The Morgan Library [VIA].

Friday, June 03, 2011

Japanese Woodblock Prints

"The Barry Rosensteel Japanese Print Collection consists of 126 woodblock prints that date from the eighteenth to early twentieth centuries. The work of over forty artists is represented in the collection [..]

The images portray Japanese culture through detailed depictions of portraits, landscapes, wildlife and theatrical performances, taking into account some of Japan’s rich history. [..]

The earliest print, dating to 1760, is by Kitao Shigemasa (1739-1820) and depicts a carp leaping a waterfall. The works of several artists of the Utagawa school are found in the collection. [..]

The prints were produced with high-quality paper. Vegetative color pigments, and, in some cases, ground precious metals, were used as part of the creative process."
[from: Collection Contents at the University of Pittsburgh]



Eguchi no Kimi seated on a recumbent pink elephant representing the Bodhisattva Fugen (1850)
Title: Eguchi no Kimi seated on a recumbent pink elephant representing the Bodhisattva Fugen
Creator: Sadahiro, Utagawa (active ca. 1825-1875)
Date: 1850



Portrait of an actor in a purple robe on striped fan (date uknown)
Title: Portrait of an actor in a purple robe on striped fan
Creator: Yoshiyuki, Mori (1835-1879)
Date: Unknown



Okubi-e portrait of a beauty (date uknown)
Title: Okubi-e portrait of a beauty
Subjects: Block printing, Japanese; Geishas in art.
Creator: Chikanobu, Kitagawa
Date: Unknown



Longevite (1948)
Title: Longevite
Creator: Jacoulet, Paul (1902-1960)
Date: November 28, 1948



Umekuni, Toyokawa (active first quarter 19th century) (1820)
Title: Portrait of Ichikawa Ebijuro (Japanese actor)
Creator: Umekuni, Toyokawa (active first quarter 19th century)
Date: 1820



The courtesan Tsukonosuke with her attendant gazing at a cuckoo in the rain (1861)
Title: The courtesan Tsukonosuke with her attendant gazing at a cuckoo in the rain
Series: Thirty-six Manners and Customs of Courtesans
Creator: Toyokuni III, Utagawa [Utagawa Kunisada] (1786-1864)
Date: 1861



Nakamura Utaemon III as Ichikawa Goemon (1828)
Title: Nakamura Utaemon III as Ichikawa Goemon
Creator: Ashiyuki
Date: 1826



Swans (date unknown)
Title: Swans
Creator: Shoson, Ohara (1877-1945)
Date: Unknown

Update: see - The Art of Ohara Shôson at Scriblets.



Return from Festival (Matsuri kudari), Nakamura Utaemon on horseback accompanied by a group of five actors (1810) a
Title: Return from Festival (Matsuri kudari), Nakamura Utaemon on horseback accompanied by a group of five actors
Creator: Toyokuni, Utagawa (1769-1825)
Date: 1810
Note: One frame from triptych; prints depicting actors in everyday life are rare.



A Daimyo's wife and her attendants fording a river in a palanquin (1794)
Title: A Daimyo's wife and her attendants fording a river in a palanquin
Creator: Toyokuni, Utagawa (1769-1825)
Date: 1794
Note: One frame from triptych



Half-length portrait of an actor as Kaneomaru (date unknown)
Title: Half-length portrait of an actor as Kaneomaru
Series: Edo meisho zue (Famous Views of Edo)
Creator: Kunisada, Utagawa (1786-1864)
Date: Unknown



The Barry Rosensteel Japanese Print Collection is available from the University of Pittsburgh [thumbnails].

Previously: Japan; from the delicious bookmarks - a collection of general category tags and brief summaries helping to organise all 1100+ BibliOdyssey posts.

Thursday, June 02, 2011

Anatomia Vegetal

Visualising the Cell Nucleus -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth a

Visualising the Cell Nucleus




Leaf growth -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth d
Leaf growth




Cell growth -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth
Cell growth




Cell organelles and cytoplasm visualisation -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth b
Cell organelles and cytoplasm visualisation




Cell membrane (or is it wall) growth -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth c
Cell membrane and cell wall growth




Dicot stem cross-section -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth e
Dicotyledon* stem cross-section




Woody cells of conifer -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth f
Woody cells of conifer




Monocot stem cross-section -- Anatomia Vegetal 1929, pub. by FE Wachsmuth g
Monocotyledon* stem cross-section




These fabulous botanical microanatomy plates constitute the total of illustrations present in 'Anatomia Vegetal' by Frederik Elfving (1929) and published by FE Wachsmuth (Leipzig) which is online at La Biblioteca Virtual de Patrimonio Bibliográfico from the Spanish Ministry of Culture.

Elfving (1854-1942) was a professor of botany at the University of Helsinki. There are a couple of books at the Internet Archive about a voyage to North America to which he contributed.
Apparently there is descriptive text to accompany the illustration plates but it doesn't appear to have been digitised.

[via + via, plus all other points in between across the tumblr-verse]

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Sunday, May 29, 2011

Falconry

Falconry is the art of using a trained raptor (bird of prey) to hunt wild quarry like birds or small mammals. The practice dates to at least 2000 BC and birds used for falconry (or hawking, a near-synonymous term in the modern parlance) include buzzards, eagles, Harris hawk, Peregrine falcons, Lanner falcon, Gyrfalcon, goshawks, owls and kestrels, among others.

The pastime is complicated and time-consuming and, in America at least, requires a minimum two year apprenticeship. The raptors are not pets and do not establish a bond with their handlers beyond trust and food source. Objections to falconry have been raised by environmentalists (it is virtually outlawed in Australia, albeit indirectly, for example) but the falconry community has made significant and undeniable contributions to species conservation and protection. I don't know enough to have an opinion other than to suppose that the trainer/handler licensing should be stringent (not too different from my thoughts on parenting).

The lithographs below, produced in the mid-1800s, come from 'Traité de Fauconnerie' by H Schlegel and AH Verster de Wulverhorst [source].



chromolithograph of Hooded falcon perched on handler's gloved hand, by H Schlegel, 1853
Le Groënlandais, Faucon Blanc Mué


(Hooded White Greenlander falcon or gyrfalcon - based on a portrait of the bird by Pierre Louis Dubourcq)



Close-up of hooded bird's head
Hooded falcon close-up



frontispiece / title-page of 'Traité de Fauconnerie' by H Schlegel, 1853
Titlepage of 'Traité de Fauconnerie', 1844-1853


Each of the above images was spliced together from screen captures;
click through to large and very large versions.




book illustration of training equipment used in falconry
Tethering and training equipment used in falconry




raptor hoods - 1853 lithograph
Raptor* hoods

"Falconry hoods are among the very first pieces of equipment that a falconer will obtain when beginning to learn the art of falconry. A properly fitted hood ensures that the bird remains calm while in the presence of humans, as otherwise it may become alarmed and distraught. A hood is essential in making a bird ready for training. The acclimatization of the bird to humans is known as "manning" and is the first step in the training regimen." [source]




L'Émérillon Hagard, le Tiercelet sors et Hagard d'Émérillon




hawk illustration
Le Tiercelet sors de l'Autour




raptor lithograph
Le tiercelet Hagard de Faucon d'Islande




picture of two birds used in falconry
L'Épervier sors et le Mouchet Hagard





Le Faucon Hagard

[A bird of prey "taken from a nest in the wild or bred in captivity is known as an eyas. A hawk trapped during its first year in the wild is called a passager, and a hawk trapped in its adult plumage is termed a haggard. The female peregrine falcon is properly called a falcon, and the male — which, in common with most species of raptors, is smaller than the female — is known as a tiercel." {source}]



falcon on rock staring up intently
Le Sacre Hagard



lithograph of crouched raptor
Le Gerfaut Sors



'Traité de Fauconnerie' (1844-1853) by Hermann Schlegel and Abraham H Verster van Wulverhorst is available online at Heinrich Heine Universität Düsseldorf [click 'Übersicht' for thumbnail pages] [Amazon]
"The finest work on Falconry which has ever been produced; not only on account of the beauty of the plates, wherein the hawks are depicted life-size and of the natural colours, but also for the general accuracy of the letterpress. [..]

Exclusive of the ornamented title-page, there are 16 folio plates, 2 of which are illustrative of Heron Hawking at the Loo, in 1844, with portraits of contemporary falconers; 2 others contain figures of hoods, jesses, lure, and other accessories; and the remaining 12 give life-sized coloured figures of the hawks employed by falconers, admirably drawn by Joseph Wolf and J. B. Sonderland."
As quoted from the veritable bible of falconry literature: 'Bibliotheca Accipitraria : A Catalogue of Books Ancient and Modern Relating to Falconry' By James Harting, 1891 (Revised) Online | Amazon | Bibliothecca Accipitraria II.

'Traité de Fauconnerie' was published in an elephant folio format (about 20x25 inches - hence, the descriptions talk of "life size" illustrations). It was issued in three instalments over nine years.

Less than one hundred copies were originally issued in the first edition between 1844 and 1853, of which only about fifty copies are known to have survived. I've seen prices in recent years ranging from £12,000 to £28,000 to £36,500 and the Abu Dhabi National Library was quoted more than £95,000 for a first edition copy last year to outfit their falconry collection.

 
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