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LOT 0022

Audubon Aquatint, Carolina Parrot

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AUDUBON, John James (1785 - 1851).
Carolina Parrot, Plate 26.
Aquatint engraving with original hand color.
London: Robert Havell, 1827-1838.
37 1/2" x 26" sheet, 50" x 37" framed.

Comparable: Arader Galleries, 2015, 2016 & 2017 - $170,800; Arader Galleries, 2020 - $ 158,600; ChristieÂ’s, 1996 - $145,500.A Genius Composition and The Most Desirable of Audubon"s Extinct Birds.The finest possible state with full margins and deckled, uncut edges.Many Museum Directors consider this image to be their favorite.In the Ornithological Biography Audubon stated, "Our Parakeets are very rapidly diminishing in number; and in some districts, where twenty-five years ago they were plentiful, scarcely any are now to be seen.... ." Unfortunately, the vibrant birds were considered a pest by farmers and were killed in large numbers to prevent them from ruining crops. This slaughter, combined with deforestation throughout their range and the popularity of their feathers in the millinery trade, led to the decline of the Parrot. The species was rarely seen outside of Florida after 1860, and by the 1920s it was considered extinct.(Cornell Lab of Ornithology).

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Time, Location
10 Oct 2020
USA, New York, NY
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[ translate ]

AUDUBON, John James (1785 - 1851).
Carolina Parrot, Plate 26.
Aquatint engraving with original hand color.
London: Robert Havell, 1827-1838.
37 1/2" x 26" sheet, 50" x 37" framed.

Comparable: Arader Galleries, 2015, 2016 & 2017 - $170,800; Arader Galleries, 2020 - $ 158,600; ChristieÂ’s, 1996 - $145,500.A Genius Composition and The Most Desirable of Audubon"s Extinct Birds.The finest possible state with full margins and deckled, uncut edges.Many Museum Directors consider this image to be their favorite.In the Ornithological Biography Audubon stated, "Our Parakeets are very rapidly diminishing in number; and in some districts, where twenty-five years ago they were plentiful, scarcely any are now to be seen.... ." Unfortunately, the vibrant birds were considered a pest by farmers and were killed in large numbers to prevent them from ruining crops. This slaughter, combined with deforestation throughout their range and the popularity of their feathers in the millinery trade, led to the decline of the Parrot. The species was rarely seen outside of Florida after 1860, and by the 1920s it was considered extinct.(Cornell Lab of Ornithology).

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Time, Location
10 Oct 2020
USA, New York, NY
Auction House
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