Rose – Rosa gallica versicolor

$4,250

Product No. redoute019

In stock

Album de Redoute

This outstanding botanical engraving is from Pierre-Joseph Redoute’s Album de Redoute. The work was published in Paris by Imprimerie de Remond. It was not dated, but was done circa 1824.

Each plate for this work was stipple-engraved, printed in color, with each finished by hand after Redoute, by Langlois, Bessin, de Gouy, Couten, Tassaert, Allais, and Chaponnieu. Album was specially published to include a selection of engravings from his most celebrated works. It included engravings from Les Roses, Les Liliacees, and Jardin de la Malmaison.

Redoute’s name is synonymous with beauty and in the world of botanical art he is known as the best. The work proved to be not only outstanding in terms of its beauty but also for its scientific merits. Many of the images were after Thory’s personal collection as well as the rose garden of the Empress Josephine’s garden at Malmaison. Redoute and Thory described almost all of the important roses that were known in their time. Lawalree describes the text as being ‘of outstanding importance to both botanists and horticulturalists.

Redoute’s fame is due in large part to his diligent effort to perfect the use of stipple engraving. This labor intensive, and therefore expensive, technique creates subtle yet stunning variations of color making it superior to the engraving alone. Each plate was created using the ‘a la poupee’ process in which the color was applied before the printing. Hand-finished coloring was painstakingly applied after printing.

Redoute was renowned for his artistic ability and tutored such people as Queen Marie-Antoinette, Empress Josephine, Marie-Louise, and Queen Marie-Amelie. Redoute influenced a breadth of artists that followed him including Turpin, Poiteau, Bessa, and Prevost. Redoute is widely considered the finest botanical illustrator of the early 19th century, if not throughout history.

The process of stipple engraving and color printing give the Redoute Rose prints their luminous quality. Stippling is an etching process that employs dots instead of lines to form the image, which is then color printed by applying colored inks directly to the copper plate for each impression. The use of colored inks, greens and browns to print the stems and leaves, and reds and pinks to print the flowers, create a more luminous print by eliminating the necessity to paint watercolor over a back inked image.

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