About This Collection of The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands
This exceptional collection of Catesby engravings is distinguished by its vivid original color, superb condition, and fine wove Whatman paper bearing the distinctive watermark. Each print retains the freshness and depth of hand-applied pigments characteristic of the finest 1771 impressions, produced in London at the height of Georgian natural history publishing. From an illustrious English collection, these works exemplify eighteenth-century natural history engraving at its highest standard.
The image shown depicts the exact piece you will receive.
The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands is Mark Catesby’s celebrated folio documenting the birds, plants, and animals of colonial North America. Issued between 1731 and 1771, the hand-colored engravings depict the flora and fauna of the southeastern colonies with scientific precision and artistic charm. Catesby’s work was the first comprehensive natural history of the American colonies and remains a cornerstone of early natural science and exploration.
Each plate combines species observed in the wild—often birds and their associated plants—drawn from firsthand study during Catesby’s expeditions. His distinctive style blends direct observation with decorative composition, creating images that are both scientifically important and visually striking. The Natural History endures as one of the most influential illustrated works of the eighteenth century and a foundational achievement in American ornithology and botanical art.
About Mark Catesby
Mark Catesby (1682–1749) was an English artist-naturalist, explorer, and early pioneer of American ornithology and botany. Between 1712 and 1726 he traveled extensively through the southern British colonies, studying and sketching the region’s unfamiliar wildlife. His landmark publication, The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands (1729–1771), stands among the earliest and most influential illustrated studies of North American flora and fauna.
Self-taught and working without institutional support, Catesby combined scientific curiosity with a distinctly personal artistic style. His engravings—printed and hand-colored in London—capture birds, plants, and animals with a clarity and directness that predate later masters such as John James Audubon. Catesby’s drawings informed the taxonomy of Carl Linnaeus, whose Systema Naturae incorporated dozens of Catesby’s species descriptions, securing his place as one of the founders of natural history illustration in the Americas.
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