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John James Audubon, Trumpeter Swan
John James Audubon - Trumpeter Swan - Art Prints and Posters
John James Audubon
Trumpeter Swan
Sale Price: $19.00
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11 x 14 in $19.00
16 x 20 in $35.00
22 x 28 in $65.00
32 x 40 in $119.00
Paper Size: 11 x 14 in.
Image Size: 6 x 9 7/8 in.
Item No: 201513
Item Type: Archival Print
Source: North Carolina Museum of Art
PRODUCT DETAILS
Quality: Every item in our archival print collection is a digital reproduction sourced from the original artwork hanging in the museum. Essentially, there is no way to get a more accurate and representative reproduction of the original art.

All items are published on 300gsm archival cotton rag paper, using the highest quality inksets available today.

Authorized Reproductions: All unframed prints are published with the museum logo watermark in the border. This custom touch proves that the item is a museum authorized reproduction of the original artwork.

A portion of every purchase from 1000Museums goes to support the arts and our partner museums.

JOHN JAMES AUDUBON BIOGRAPHY
1785–1851, American ornithologist, b. Les Cayes, Santo Domingo (now Haiti). The son of a French naval officer and a Creole woman, he was educated in France and in 1803 came to the Audubon estate, “Mill Grove,” near Philadelphia. There he spent much time observing birds and making the first American bird-banding experiments. In 1808 he married Lucy Bakewell, whose faith and support were factors in his eventual success. Between 1808 and 1820 he lived mostly in Kentucky, frequently changing his occupation and neglecting his business to carry on his bird observations.

He began painting portraits for a livelihood and descended the Mississippi to New Orleans, where for a time he taught drawing. From 1823 to 1828 his wife conducted a private school, in which he taught for a short time, in West Feliciana parish, La. In 1826 he went to Great Britain in search of a publisher and subscribers for his bird drawings, meeting with favorable response in Edinburgh and London. The Birds of America, in elephant folio size, was published in parts between 1827 and 1838, with engravings by Robert Havell,Jr. The accompanying text, called the Ornithological Biography (5 vol., 1831–39), was prepared largely in Edinburgh in collaboration with the Scottish naturalist William MacGillivray, who was responsible for its more scientific information. Extracts from Audubon's contributions, edited in 1926 by F. H. Herrick as Delineations of American Scenery and Character, reveal his stylistic qualities and furnish many pictures of American frontier life. Audubon worked on a smaller edition of his great work and also, in collaboration with John Bachman, began The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, which was completed by his sons Victor Gifford Audubon and John Woodhouse Audubon (plates, 30 parts, 1842–45; text, 3 vol., 1846–54).

During these years his home was on the Hudson River in the northern part of Manhattan island. While his drawings and paintings of bird life may not wholly satisfy both the critical artist and the meticulous scientist, their achievement in both areas is considerable. They remain one of the great achievements of American intellectual history and have gained wide popularity, having been reprinted many times.

POPULAR WORKS
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John James Audubon
Virginian Partridge, from The Birds of America, 1827–38
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Canaletto
Capriccio: The Rialto Bridge and The Church of S. Giorgio Maggiore
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John James Audubon
Whooping Crane, from The Birds of America, 1827–38
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Raphael
St. Jerome Saving Sylvanus and Punishing the Heretic Sabianus
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