Tag: Mark Catesby

  • Monday, February 20, 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm Eastern – Maria Sibylla Merian: Pioneer of Natural History Illustration, Online

    Maria Sibylla Merian (1614 -1717) stands alone as the only female naturalist-artist and explorer of late seventeenth, early eighteenth-century Europe. Trained as an artist in Germany in the workshop of her stepfather, Jacob Merrell, Merian studied insects and reared silkworms as a child. Fascinated by the exotic insects she saw in the cabinets of collectors in Holland where she later lived, she made a pioneering visit to the Dutch colony of Suriname between 1699 and 1701 together with her daughter, Dorothea. There for two years she studied tropical insect life on its native plants, making sketches and preserving specimens. On her return to Holland, she spent five years working on a magnificent publication on the metamorphosis of insects, her Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium (1705).

    Merian’s pioneering travels and work, and the dramatic illustrations she made of insects on their host plants, provided an example to many contemporary and later naturalists and plant lovers, including the first Duchess of Beaufort, whose florilegium will form the last talk of this online Gardens Trust series. This ticket is for this individual session and costs £5. Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days prior to the start of the talk, and a link to the recorded session (available for 1 week) will be sent shortly afterwards.

    Henrietta McBurney MVO, FLS, FSA, is an art curator and art historian. She worked as curator in the Print Room of the Royal Library, Windsor, for nearly 20 years. Subsequently she was keeper of fine and decorative art at Eton College, and curator of collections at the Garrick Club and Newnham College, Cambridge; she has since worked free-lance as a curator for Cambridge colleges. She has a particular interest in the intersection of art and science and has recently published Illuminating Natural History. The Art and Science of Mark Catesby (Paul Mellon Centre/Yale, June 2021). Other publications include studies on the 17th-century Florilegium of Alexander Marshal and Birds, Other Animals and Natural Curiosities, the natural history drawings for Cassiano dal Pozzo’s Paper Museum.

  • Sunday, January 17, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – The Curious and Mysterious Mr. Catesby

    On Sunday January 17, at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston, learn about North America’s first naturalist, English-born Mark Catesby (1683-1749), who published an early account of the New World’s flora and fauna titled Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands. The program, free with admission to the garden, will take place at 1 pm. Leslie Overstreet, the Smithsonian Institutions’s Curator of Natural History Rare Books, has authored papers on early books in the natural sciences in the Archives of Natural History and contributed chapters entitled Priority! The dating of scientific names in ornithology (2011) and Gardening by the book (2013). Her primary research has focused for many years on the printing of Mark Catesby’s book.  She served as a consultant to the documentary film The Curious Mr. Catesby, produced by the Catesby Commemorative Trust and broadcast on public-television stations across the U.S. in 2009. The preliminary results of her research on Catesby’s book have now been published in The Curious Mr. Catesby (2015).

  • Sunday, November 4 – Friday, November 9 – Mark Catesby’s Third Centennial in America

    300 years ago and a century before Audubon, British born Mark Catesby followed his passion in search of plants and nature that were foreign to England and set out for America in 1712. There he discovered a new world of endless possibilities and strange creatures.

    The Catesby Commemorative Trust invites you to explore Mark Catesby’s world and discover how he introduced the wild beauty of North America to the astonished eyes of Europe and went on to influence artists such as William Bartram and John James Audubon.

    On November 4th – 9th, 2012, The Catesby Commemorative Trust will bring together experts from America and Europe to discuss Catesby’s influences, drawings, science and impact on natural history.  You will travel to places once visited by Mark Catesby and have the privilege of viewing his most famous etchings.

    They  hope you will join them in Richmond, Virginia, Washington, D.C. and Charleston, South Carolina to discover the scientific value and marvel at the beauty of Mark Catesby’s remarkable work. For a complete itinerary, and to register, visit www.catesbytrust.org/tercentennial/