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Sunday, October 6, 2024 |
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Audobon Watercolors at New York Historical Society |
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NEW YORK, NY.- For the first time ever the sounds of birds will accompany an exhibit of original Audubon watercolors when the New-York Historical Society (N-YHS) creates a virtual aviary with its exhibition, Audubons Aviary, February 18th thru March 27, in its second-floor gallery, Dexter Hall.
The multi-media exhibition will showcase a selection of approximately 40 watercolors by John James Audubon (1785-1851) preparatory for his sumptuous, double-elephant folio print edition of The Birds of America (1827-38), said Roberta Olson, the exhibits curator.
Three-dimensional objectsfrom Audubons own portable writing desk and purse for tipping, sewn by his wife Lucy Bakewell Audubon, to ornithological models and mounts demonstrating Audubons technique of drawing from specimens as well as from natureand a unique sound component, courtesy of Charlie Murrow Associates Inc. will help tell the story of Audubons magnificent obsession, the world-renowned The Birds of America. They will also characterize the genius of this buckskin-wearing American ornithologist with a French accent.
The N-YHS features a selection of material from the Societys unparalleled cache of Auduboniana to illuminate the story of Audubons magnificent obsession, Olson said.
The Societys Audubon collection is the largest single repository of Auduboniana in the world, Olson said. The N-YHS holds 435 watercolors preparatory for 433 of the 435 plates in Birds of America. No watercolors for plates 84 and 155 are known to exist.
The age of the watercolors makes them extremely fragile, and only a few are placed on display at any given time, Olson said. To preserve the watercolors each can only be exhibited once every 10 years.
The complex transatlantic genesis of The Birds of America was a fascinating saga of collaboration and entrepreneurship, as well as a great love story. The project involved Audubons entire family and that of his talented London engraver, Robert Havell, Jr. Its success pivoted around many journeys in the United States and Europe in quest of specimens and subscribers, together with Atlantic crossings to supervise the production of the plates in Havells London studio.
An accomplished musician who was sensitive to sound, Audubon frequently described birdcalls and songs as an integral part of his species identification. To suggest Audubons observations in the field that enabled him to create his life-like images, there will be periodic birdcalls in a supplementary four-dimensional sound program as part of the exhibit. A short video will underline Audubons mastery at encapsulating each birds personality and unique physical characteristics in a single image.
Most of the objects in the exhibitionincluding one of the rare double-elephant folio editions of 435 plates and Audubons subscription list in his own handwill be drawn from the Societys collection of 'Auduboniana'. There will also be several major loans from New York institutions. Featuring a strong didactic, as well as experiential thread, the exhibition will include a rare opportunity to explore Audubons creative process through a juxtaposition of an original watercolor with its corresponding copperplate and hand-colored [tinted] engraving.
The exhibition builds on N-YHSs mission of exploring American history with an emphasis on New York, as it celebrates its bicentennial anniversary. As New Yorks oldest museum, part of its original mandate was to collect material pertinent to natural history. Today, the Audubon collection is one of the few vestiges of that initial mission. In response to the huge demand to view the light-sensitive Audubon watercolors, four to six hang in rotating installations in the Audubon Niche of the Societys Henry Luce III Center for the Study of American Culture. Beginning last February with Birds of Central Park: Audubons Watercolors, the Society initiated an annual month-long Audubon event to share with the public a wider selection of these rare treasures. The 2005 exhibition, Audubons Aviary, continues this tradition.
To accompany the exhibit, N-YHS plans an exciting series of public programs with a New York focus, underlining why both Audubon and his printer, Robert Havell, made New York their final home.
Highlights include: A discussion with Pulitzer Prize winning author Richard Rhodes, who will bring his latest book to N-YHS on February 23. Also, a three-part series examining natures pivotal role in the growth of our great city, titled John James Audubon and the Nature of New York produced in association with Nurture New Yorks Nature and the New York City Audubon Society.
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