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Rare, early c.19th hand coloured engraving of the Wedge-tailed Eagle. This is the first engraved illustration of the Wedge-tailed Eagle. 1699 First sighting had been made much earlier by William Dampier at Shark Bay, Western Australia on 6th August 1699 … Read Full Description
$A 245
Within Australia
All orders ship freewithin Australia
Rest of the World
Orders over A$300
ship free worldwide
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Rare, early c.19th hand coloured engraving of the Wedge-tailed Eagle.
This is the first engraved illustration of the Wedge-tailed Eagle.
1699 First sighting had been made much earlier by William Dampier at Shark Bay, Western Australia on 6th August 1699
1800 First capture was by Captain Waterhouse at Broken Bay NSW in March 1800.
Modern binomial name: Aquila audax
First described: Latham, 1802
Distribution Australia wide (mainland).
From: Barrington’s, The History of New South Wales including Botany Bay, Port Jackson, Pamaratta, Sydney, and all its Dependancies…. sic
References:
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)
English engraver, artist and copperplate printer whose work is chiefly remembered for its role in shaping early European visual impressions of Australia. He was born in Stepney, London, around 1764, the son of a victualler. In 1778 he was apprenticed to a tinplate worker, a trade that likely gave him the technical grounding later useful in engraving and printing. By the 1790s Woodthorpe was established in London as a professional engraver and printer, working mainly from premises in Fetter Lane. He produced maps, views and decorative prints, often hand-coloured, and was active as both engraver and publisher. His most significant work dates from the early years of the nineteenth century, when he engraved a series of plates illustrating New South Wales for publications associated with Georges Barrington. These images included views of Sydney and its surroundings, depictions of Aboriginal people, native animals and colonial life.
Woodthorpe never visited Australia, and his engravings were based on sketches and descriptions supplied by others. As a result, many of his scenes are imaginative or exaggerated rather than strictly accurate. Despite this, they were among the earliest widely circulated images of the Australian colony and played an important role in shaping how Britain and Europe imagined the new settlement.
Vincent Woodthorpe died in London on 22 September 1822.
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