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Les Liliacees Oppenheimer Editions |
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In 1798, Josephine acquired a grand estate, Malmaison, and began to fill its gardens with the rarest plants that the old and new worlds could furnish. Redouté flourished under Josephine's reign, publishing during this period the monumental Les Liliacées (1802-1816), which named the most dramatic plate after his benefactress, the "Amaryllis Josephinae". Redouté is credited with perfecting the stipple engraving technique and applying it to rendering his flower paintings. In describing this technique Redouté said, "The process which we invented in 1796 for colour printing consists in the employment of these colours on a single plate by a method of our own. We have thereby softness and brilliance of a watercolour, as can be seen in our...Liliacées and other works." In recognition of this valuable contribution, Redouté was awarded a medal by Louis XVIII. Only two hundred copies of Les Liliacées were engraved, appearing in eighty parts from 1802 to 1816. Josephine's support made the work possible, herself ordering several sets. Napoleon divorced Josephine in 1809, and she died in 1814. In the absence of Josephine¹s patronage, Redouté's fortunes began to decline. Somewhat impoverished, he died in 1840, suffering a stroke as he examined the corolla of a white lily a student had brought to him. Oppenheimer Editions Les Liliacees recreates a lilmited eddition of Redoutes original work with uncompromising exactitude. All prints are $600. Each is stamped and numbered.
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