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Rare, early c.19th hand coloured engraving of the Eastern Grey Kangaroo charmingly portrayed eating leaves off a tree with a pair of Joey’s in her pouch. Modern binomial name: Macropus giganteu First described: Shaw, 1790 Distribution Eastern Australia S.A., Vic, … Read Full Description
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Orders over A$300
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Rare, early c.19th hand coloured engraving of the Eastern Grey Kangaroo charmingly portrayed eating leaves off a tree with a pair of Joey’s in her pouch.
Modern binomial name: Macropus giganteu
First described: Shaw, 1790
Distribution Eastern Australia S.A., Vic, TAS, NSW, QLD
The first illustration of a ‘Kangaroo’ drawn from an Australian species, is acknowledged as that drawn by George Stubb’s from a specimen collected at Endeavour River in 1770 by James Cook’s crew while the Endeavour was being careened. The subsequent engraving was published in 1773, in the official accounts of the voyage of the Endeavour. That iconic image captured the public’s imagination for over sixty years and was the first depiction of any Australian animal in western art. Confusion as to the original species described, based on the specimens brought back by Cook and the subsequent painting by Stubb’s. This situation arose from the comparisons of drawings and photographs which are the only records of the lost original specimens with the Parkinson’s sketch made on 23rd June 1770 at Endeavour River and the later Stubb’s painting. Parkinon’s sketches and paintings of natural history subjects held in public institutions, clearly show a prodigious artistic talent, and his sketch of a kangaroo made on the spot, is certainly a more realistic depiction than one by Stubb’s that has exaggerated features. Stubb’s had the disadvantages of not seeing a live animal and only having the dried skin that was brought back by Cook to work from. It is probable that the skin was firstly re-hydrated and then inflated for Stubb’s to be able paint the animal. It has been established that the kangaroos collected on Cook’s expedition near Cooktown were specimens of the Grey Kangaroo, Macropus giganteus (Roland Strachan CBOM p. 244).
The first sighting of a kangaroo in fact was an earlier one, by Francis Pelsaert of ‘the teeming cats‘ on 15th November, 1629 on the Abrolhos Islands where the Batavia had been wrecked. The first illustration of a Macropod was made to the Stubb’s illustration, titled ‘Kangaron’ and made on 15th November 1629′ by Matthys Pool and described by Cornelis de Bruyn in ‘Reizen over Moskovie door Persie en Indie’, 1714 but the animal depicted was not an Australian species but Thylogale brunii (Dusky Pademelon), a Filander native to New Guinea.
From: Barrington’s, The History of New South Wales.
Collections:
Ferguson, J. A. Bibliography of Australia Volumes 1-8, Canberra 1976: 345
Abbey, J.R. Travel in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860. London 1972: 565
Collections:
National Library Australia: Bib ID: 531817
State Library New South Wales: Record Identifier 74Vv7J3Nx6BA
State Library Victoria: RARELT 994.402 B27H
State Library South Australia: 994.402 B276
Vincent Woodthorpe (1764 - 1822)
Print and map engraver and copperplate printer, born in Stepney in about 1764, the son of Vincent Woodthorpe, a victualler, and his wife Elizabeth Waterhouse, who had married in 1763. Apprenticed (Tinplate Workers)to Garnet Terry 8 Jan 1778. He had premises at 27 Fetter Lane, London 1796-1809 and 29 Fetter Lane, London 1800-1822. Woodthorpe engraved a number of the illustrations for Barringtons account of the colony of New South Wales, the subjects were based on earlier issued engravings in first fleet journals.
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