Issue:
118
Page: 54-73
The Botanical Endeavour of Sir Joseph Banks: Historic Prints from His Florilegium Now Available Like Never Before
by Connor Yearsley
HerbalGram.
2018; American Botanical Council
Click here to view a PDF of the article
Almost 250 years after Captain James
Cook’s (1728-1779) HMS Endeavour circumnavigated the globe, Joseph
Banks’ Florilegium: Botanical Treasures from Cook’s First Voyage (Thames
& Hudson, 2017) has been published. The 320-page book showcases 147
stunning, full-page, color botanical prints that resulted from the extensive
work of the English botanist and naturalist Sir Joseph Banks (1743-1820) and
the small, highly skilled team he oversaw onboard the Endeavour from
1768 to 1771.1
When the Endeavour set out in
1768 on Cook’s first of three around-the-world voyages, roughly a third of the
world’s map remained blank or filled with fantasies.2 While Cook
changed that, Banks and his team collected an estimated 30,000 plant and animal
specimens during their nearly three-year voyage of discovery to the South
Pacific and back. This collection yielded “some 3,600-odd described species, of
which it is probable that the plant species new to science may exceed 1,400,”
according to Banks’ biographer Harold B. Carter (1910-2005). To put this
achievement in perspective, the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus’ Species
Plantarum (1753), which formed the basis of modern plant taxonomy (the
binomial system for naming plants), included about 6,000 plant species known to
Linnaeus at the time. Thus, the plant species that the Endeavour expedition
introduced to Western botany expanded Linnaeus’ list by almost 25% or more (if
Carter’s estimate is accurate) and helped disprove Linnaeus’ belief that the
world contained no more than 10,000 plant species.2-4
After the voyage, Banks had 743
copper-plate engravings made, at great personal expense, from the original
artwork (finished watercolors and precise sketches) of the Scottish artist
Sydney Parkinson (1745-1771), who was part of Banks’ team on the expedition.
The engravings, almost a literal ton of the finest copper in total, are known
collectively as Banks’ Florilegium, and each one depicts a plant species that
was encountered on the voyage.1,5 As far as is known, all of these
species are still extant, and many, if not most, were new to European botany at
the time. The new book’s aim was to provide a representative sample of some of
the most aesthetic of these 743 engravings, especially those that depict
economically and ecologically important species. The 147 prints that were
chosen are perhaps among the most beautiful and precise botanical prints ever
created.1
According to Mel Gooding, art historian
and co-author of the book, the motives of Banks and his team were to identify
and record as many plants as possible in the circumstances of the voyage
(email, January 10, 2018). “Banks and [Swedish naturalist Daniel] Solander were
driven by the demands of Linnaean taxonomy and the disinterested discovery and
classification of plants rather [than] by any utilitarian criteria,” he wrote.
“That is why the selection of reproductions [in the book] was generally, and in
the first place, arbitrary, determined by requirements of botanic variety and
visual interest.” However, many of the selected species do have ethnobotanical
uses, and nine of these species are included in the following pages.
For a variety of reasons, Banks’
Florilegium was never published in Banks’ lifetime. In fact, the plates were
printed and published in color for the first time between 1980 and 1990 by
Alecto Historical Editions (a Salisbury, England-based publisher of limited
edition prints, engravings, and facsimiles), in association with the Natural
History Museum in Kensington, London. A limited number of complete sets were
produced over this decade, and the selection in the new book comes from those
prints, thus making them available to the general public for the first time.1,5
All the plants in the Florilegium, except one (not included in the book),
were depicted life-size, and the digital reproductions in the book are reduced
to about 75% of the size of the original plates, which are almost all the same
size (about 18 x 12 inches [approx. 46 x 31 centimeters]).1
In the book, commentaries by botanist
David Mabberley, PhD, accompany each print, and these include information about
the botany and utility of the depicted species, and, in some cases, historical
details about the expedition’s observations of, and experiences with, the
species. There are also detailed sections by Gooding about the voyage itself
and the making of the Florilegium, and a section by Joe Studholme, the co-founder
and director of Alecto Historical Editions, about the modern printing of the
Florilegium.1
The term “florilegium” is derived from
the Latin flos, meaning “flower,” and legere, meaning “to gather”
(literally a flower gathering or an anthology). This term was not used by
Banks, but was adopted for the 20th-century publication of the engravings. As
Gooding explains in the book, Banks intended the Florilegium to be “a major
contribution to science…; the authoritative historical basis of a new taxonomy;
the initiation of the publication of Australasian botany. For the modern
viewer, however, it constitutes, above all, a work of outstanding graphic
achievement and a radiant revelation of natural beauty in its infinite variety
and particularity.”1
The Voyage
On August 25, 1768,* the Endeavour,
with 39-year-old Cook† at the helm,
departed from Plymouth, England, with 94 people onboard and provisions
(including pigs, poultry, and a milking goat) for 18 months.1-3 The Endeavour
was a type of vessel called a bark, which the British Admiralty chose at
least partly because she was more likely than a heavier vessel to float off if
she grounded in shallow water, a fact that likely helped prevent disaster later
when she grounded and almost sank on Endeavour Reef, part of the Great Barrier
Reef off the eastern coast of Australia. The 368-ton, 105-foot-long vessel had
ample room for stowage in her hold, which was necessary for the vast
collections, botanical and otherwise, that would be gathered during the
journey.6
Cook’s instructions from both the Royal
Society and the Admiralty were to travel to King George’s Island (Tahiti) in
the South Pacific and observe the transit of Venus across the face of the Sun,
which was expected on June 3, 1769.1-4 Data from this observation
would enable the calculation of the distance from Earth to the Sun, which, in
turn, would make calculations of longitude more accurate and thus aid
navigation.1 Readings were needed in the Southern Hemisphere, and
Tahiti was deemed a suitable viewing location.4 Observations of
Venus’ previous transit in 1761 had failed, and the next transit would not
occur until 1874. The Royal Society first met in 1767 to prepare for this rare
occurrence and eventually gained the support of the government and King George
III.7
Cook ultimately was chosen to lead the
expedition, partly because of his naval service as well as his skills as a
navigator and cartographer7 (some of his maps reportedly remained in
use as late as the 1990s2). The Admiralty purchased a merchant
collier (a coal-carrying cargo ship), the Earl of Pembroke, which was
refitted for the voyage and renamed Endeavour.7 The Admiralty
also gave Cook sealed instructions to find a mythical “Southern Continent,” Terra
Australis Incognita, which was thought by some to exist in the Southern
Hemisphere, and claim it for Britain.1
Although the astronomical mission was
the Royal Society’s initial, main focus, it responded with some enthusiasm when
Banks, one of the Society’s fellows, asked to join the expedition. In an
official application to the Admiralty, the Council of the Royal Society wrote:
“Joseph Banks …, a gentleman of large fortune, who is well versed in Natural
History, being desirous of undertaking the same voyage, the Council very
earnestly request their Lordships, that in regard to Mr. Banks’s great personal
merit, and for the advancement of useful knowledge, he also, together with his
suite … be received on board of the ship.”8
Banks’ friends generally were interested
in the prospect of his voyage, but some tried to persuade him to make the
“Grand Tour” of Europe instead (like many other upper-class European young men
at the time), to which he responded: “Every blockhead does that; my Grand Tour
shall be one round the whole globe.”8
The high-spirited 25-year-old had been
fascinated with nature and botany from a young age.1,4 As a boy, he
loved to explore the meadows, woods, stream banks, and fens that surrounded
Revesby Abbey, the family’s estate in Lincolnshire, England. He enjoyed fishing
for trout and hunting ducks and wood pigeons, and was known to rub toads on his
face to prove that they were harmless. At age 21, after his father died, Banks
inherited the family’s estates (totaling 9,000 to 10,000 acres) and a
considerable fortune, which reportedly made him one of England’s wealthiest
men.4 His expedition to Newfoundland and Labrador in 1766 had helped
prepare him to oversee the Endeavour’s scientific program.1
Banks and Cook could scarcely have been
more different. According to Blue Latitudes: Boldly Going Where Captain Cook
Has Gone Before (Picador, 2002): “The two men were fifteen years apart in
age and hailed from opposite ends of the class system: Cook of peasant stock,
with little schooling; Banks a nobleman’s son, educated at Harrow, Eton, and
Oxford…. Cook was a family man and naval careerist, Banks a rakish dilettante….
Yet the day laborer’s son and the landed gentleman would forge one of the great
partnerships in the history of exploration, akin to that between Meriwether
Lewis and William Clark.”2
Among Banks’ entourage was Daniel
Solander (1733-1782), an esteemed Swedish naturalist and taxonomist and a
favorite pupil and colleague of Linnaeus. In 1760, Solander had come to London
at Linnaeus’ arrangement to give “instruction in Linnaean principles,” and, in
1763, he began to catalog the collections, using the Linnaean system, at the
then-new British Museum. In 1764, Solander was elected to the Royal Society. He
volunteered to accompany his friend Banks on the voyage and would be his close
collaborator until Solander’s death in 1782. Throughout the voyage, he
collected specimens, which he then dried, recorded, and named. With Solander
came his secretary, Herman D. Spöring (1733-1771), a Finn whose talents
included botanical and topographical drawing and clock- and instrument-making.1
Banks also recruited, at his own
expense, the young artists Sydney Parkinson and Alexander Buchan (d. 1769).
Parkinson, a Quaker from Edinburgh and a child of the Edinburgh Enlightenment,
was a skilled botanical artist. Buchan, also from Edinburgh, was a talented
depicter of people and landscapes.1
The supernumeraries, or the “gentlemen,”
as Banks and his entourage were known onboard, had separate quarters, dined
with Cook in the stern’s great cabin (far removed from the mess deck), and were
largely exempt from naval duties and discipline.2
Banks paid for himself, his staff, and
the materials they used on the journey. According to Carter, Banks and his
entourage may have brought some 20 tons of baggage and equipment onboard.3
In a letter to Linnaeus, the English naturalist John Ellis wrote: “No people
ever went to sea better fitted out for the purpose of natural history, nor more
elegantly. They have got a fine library of natural history: they have all sorts
of machines for catching and preserving insects; all kinds of nets, trawls,
drags, and hooks for coral fishing; they have even a curious contrivance of a
telescope by which, put into the water, you can see the bottom at a great
depth, where it is clear. They have many cases of bottles with ground stoppers,
of several sizes, to preserve animals in spirits. They have the several sorts
of salts to surround the seeds; and wax, both bees’-wax and that of the Myrica….
[I]n short, Solander assured me this expedition would cost Mr. Banks £10,000.”9
This amount was more than twice what King George III contributed to the
expedition, and is equal to roughly $1 million today.2 It is also
significantly more than the £2,840 that originally was paid for the Endeavour.6
The “fine library” onboard comprised
about 40 books, including, critically, Linnaeus’ Systema Naturae and Species
Plantarum, in addition to recent books about South Seas exploration by the
French polymath Charles de Brosses and the Scottish geographer Alexander
Dalrymple.1
Madeira, Brazil, and Tierra del Fuego
On September 13, 1768, the expedition
made first landfall at Funchal in Madeira, a Portuguese archipelago in the
North Atlantic. Parkinson depicted 21 previously unknown species collected
here, 11 of which were later engraved. After five days, the Endeavour,
with new provisions (including Madeira wine), headed for Brazil.1
On November 13, 1768, landfall was made
at Rio de Janeiro, but the Portuguese governor allowed only Cook to go ashore,
to the dismay of everyone, perhaps especially Banks and his team. However,
unauthorized trips ashore and vegetation brought onboard for the livestock
yielded some specimens. Of nearly 40 specimens that Parkinson was directed to
depict, 23 were later engraved.1
From Brazil, the Endeavour sailed
southwest toward Tierra del Fuego (the “Land of Fire,” an archipelago at the
southernmost tip of South America), with the weather becoming progressively
colder the further south she went.1 Cook opted to avoid passing
through the often-hazardous Strait of Magellan (named for the Portuguese
explorer Ferdinand Magellan, who navigated it in 1520)7 and would
stock up on firewood and fresh water in Tierra del Fuego.1
On January 15, 1769, Cook anchored in
the Bay of Good Success, which would not live up to its name.3
Banks, Solander, and others went inland to gather plants, but bad weather
trapped them on the hills above the shore for multiple nights. On the second
night, two of Banks’ servants froze to death. Parkinson depicted 70 of the
specimens collected here.1
Society Islands
The Endeavour then continued
southwest, rounded Cape Horn, and headed northwest toward Tahiti. During this
stretch, as with each later long leg of the journey, Banks and his team worked
in the great cabin. Parkinson spent his time depicting the specimens given to
him and had to contend with the sea swell. Throughout the journey, he had to
work quickly to depict the specimens before they wilted and lost their color in
the tropical or subtropical conditions.1
After months at sea, Cook finally
anchored in Matavai Bay on the north coast of Tahiti on April 13, 1769. Not
long after arrival, Buchan died from epilepsy before he had been able to
accomplish much on the voyage. Banks lamented this, not only because Buchan was
“an ingenious and good young man,” in Banks’ words, but also because it
prevented Banks from being able to bring back to England pictures of the
landscapes and native people encountered on the voyage.1
Banks spent much of the expedition’s
three-month stay in Tahiti engaged in diplomacy and ethnography, but he did
find some time for botanical activities.1 In his journal, on July 4,
1769, he wrote: “I employd myself in planting a large quantity of the seeds of
Water melons, Oranges, Lemons, limes … which I had brought from Rio de
Janeiro.” This exemplified what scientists eventually called the “antipodean
exchange” — the transportation of plants (and later animals) among European
nations, the Americas, and the lands of the South Seas — which impacted the
subsequent look of the world and played an important part in Banks’ later life
and work.4
With the astronomical mission complete,
Cook set sail on July 13, 1769, to explore the other islands that, along with
Tahiti, form the archipelago he called the Society Islands.1 The
voyage brought many of these islands, including Tahiti, Bora-Bora, Moorea, and
Raiatea, into the British sphere of influence.4 Then, on August 14,
Cook sailed south to search for the unknown Southern Continent, as the
Admiralty had instructed. After sailing for about 1,500 miles, in increasingly
bad weather, Cook finally turned west toward New Zealand, without finding the
sought-for Southern Continent. During this stretch, Parkinson
depicted specimens from the Society Islands, from which 89 plates were later
engraved.1
New Zealand
The Endeavour landed on the east
coast of the North Island of New Zealand in early October 1769.1 It
stayed in New Zealand for almost six months,‡
but spent only about a third of that time anchored near land. While ashore, the
expedition had some tense encounters with the Māori.2 “I suppose
they live intirely [sic] upon fish dogs and Enemies,” Banks wrote of the Māori.4
Parkinson, however, skillfully depicted their facial markings, carved weaponry,
boats, and dwellings.1
Most of the time in
New Zealand was spent charting the coastline.2 Cook
circumnavigated** the two main islands and determined there was a strait
between them (Cook Strait). With Parkinson’s help,1 he charted the
archipelago so skillfully that Julien Crozet, a French navigator who followed
in Cook’s wake, remarked, “I doubt much whether the charts of our own French
coasts are laid down with greater precision.”2 The ship put in when
and where possible, and Banks and his team gathered an impressive collection of
specimens, with the islets and headlands of Queen Charlotte Sound (at the
northern tip of the South Island) being especially fruitful.4 Of the
New Zealand specimens depicted by Parkinson, 182 were later engraved.1
Australia
From New Zealand,
the ship sailed west to Australia (then called New Holland, so named by the
Dutch explorer Abel Tasman) and became the first European expedition to reach
the eastern coast of the continent.1,4 On April 28, 1770, Cook
sailed between what he called Cape Banks and Point Solander and anchored in a
large bay, just south of present-day Sydney.4 This was the first of
a series of landfalls on the eastern coast.1 Here, Banks and his
team collected hundreds of specimens, including the first species of Banksia
(Proteaceae), a genus later named for Banks.4 “The great quantity of
New Plants … Mr Banks and Dr Solander collected in this place,” Cook wrote,
“occasioned my giveing it the name of Botany Bay.” This bay later figured
prominently in the establishment of the Australian penal colony.1,4
Cook continued
north, charting the coast and naming landmarks as he went,1 but on
the night of June 11, 1770, about 13 miles offshore, the Endeavour struck
the Great Barrier Reef,2 which Cook did not know existed until then.1
Surf thrashed the ship against the reef so violently that “we could hardly keep
our legs upon the Quarter deck,” Banks wrote. At first, Cook sent out small
boats, which were anchored and then wound up with winches to try to pull the
ship off the coral. When the ship still didn’t budge, about 50 tons, including
cannons, firewood, water casks, and food stores, were jettisoned.2
After the ship
began to leak the next morning, the men, including Banks, took turns using
suction pumps. By nightfall, water in the hold rose to almost four feet.
Finally, after great effort, with men pulling cables and anchor lines, the ship
lifted off the reef, at which point water rushed into the hold — or so one
crewman reported. “Fear of death now stard us in the face,” Banks wrote. “I
intirely gave up the ship and packing up what I thought I might save prepard
myself for the worst.”2
To everyone’s
relief, it eventually was realized that the situation was not as grave as
reported, and the men continued at the pumps. In addition, Cook used a
technique called fothering, which involved covering a sail with a mix of oakum
(tarred rope fiber), wool, and “sheeps dung or other filth,” as Cook described.
The sail then was guided under the ship to cover the largest gash. Finally, on
June 18, a full week after the Endeavour ran aground, Cook sailed the
crippled ship into a nearby, narrow river (which he called Endeavour River) and
moored beside a steep bank.2
When Cook examined
the ship, he found “a large piece of Coral rock that was sticking in one hole.”
This had broken off and plugged the gash it created.2 If not for
this fortunate break and everyone’s extensive efforts, everyone and everything
onboard, including the natural history collections, Parkinson’s artwork, and
Cook’s charts, may have been lost to the sea and history.1,2 The
botanical specimens, stored in a bread hold in the stern, had been soaked in
seawater during the ordeal, but Banks and Solander brought them ashore to be
dried, and Cook wrote that most “were, by [their] indefatigable care and
attention restored to a state of preservation.”1
The ship was
beached at Endeavour River for almost seven weeks while she was repaired.1,2
In the meantime, the men became fascinated by the kangaroo, which they referred
to as “the wild animal” or “the beast so much talkd of,” and had multiple
encounters with the Aborigines.2 In addition, Banks and Solander had
a chance for a flurry of botanizing.1 On August 4, 1770, the Endeavour,
barely seaworthy, hauled out from the river and continued north.2
Soon, she was in serious danger of wrecking again, but Cook eventually escaped
through what he called Providential Channel.1,2 On August 22, 1770,
Cook claimed the entire eastern coast of Australia for the British Crown.1
His charts of that coast filled in a major gap of the continent’s map and
helped establish its true extent, which previously had been only speculated
about.4 Parkinson depicted almost 700 of the specimens collected in
Australia, from which at least 337 plates were engraved.1
Batavia
Before landing at
Batavia, Java (the primary port of the Dutch East Indies and site of
present-day Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta), on October 5, 1770, the expedition
generally had remained in good health. In fact, despite being at sea for more
than two years, only eight (8.5%) of the original 94 who left Plymouth had died
from disease or accidents.2 Cook showed commendable concern for the
well-being of all those under his command. He insisted that the lower decks be
aerated and fumigated and that all quarters be cleaned rigorously and
regularly. He also enforced a dietary regime intended to prevent scurvy (a
severe vitamin C deficiency).1 This included regular amounts of
sauerkraut, which contains vitamin C.10 Although a few suffered
mildly from scurvy, remarkably, none died from it on the journey.1
In his journal, Banks noted that lemon (Citrus limon, Rutaceae) juice
seemed to combat signs of his own scurvy.10
But landing at
Batavia, where the ship was refitted and re-provisioned for the voyage home via
the Indian Ocean and Cape Town, changed things.1,2 The port’s
canals, in which dead animals and sewage were dumped, were breeding sites for
mosquitoes and disease. Ships from around the world also brought their own
diseases. During the three-month stay, many became sick or died.2
Parkinson somehow managed to depict 43 plant specimens he collected, of which
30 were later engraved.1 Not soon enough, the ship, now full of
disease, left Batavia. On the way to Cape Town, Spöring, the astronomer Charles
Green, and 25-year-old Parkinson (the artistic star of the voyage), died from
dysentery.1,2 Banks and Solander also suffered with, but ultimately
survived, the “bloody flux.”1 Banks may also have had typhus.4
England
When the ship
moored in England on July 12, 1771, only 56 (60%) of the original 94 had
survived.1,2 The Endeavour had traveled an estimated
82,000 kilometers (50,952 miles), according to the Captain Cook Society (email
from Ian Boreham, editor with the Captain Cook Society, December 11, 2017).
Banks returned to greater celebrity than Cook did.1 He and his team
had collected everything from insects to the shells of mollusks to the skins
and skeletons of kangaroos. The collection, much of which was completely novel
in Europe at the time, would not be matched until the expeditions of the
Prussian explorer and naturalist Alexander von Humboldt to tropical America 30
years later.4
When Linnaeus
learned that Banks and Solander planned to accompany Cook on the HMS
Resolution on Cook’s second voyage, he feared that the “matchless and truly
astonishing collection” from the first voyage, as Linnaeus described it in a
letter to John Ellis, might be “thrust into some corner, to become perhaps the
prey of insects and of destruction.”4
Linnaeus did not
need to worry, however, because the Resolution ultimately sailed in July
1772 without Banks, who had wanted to bring 17 people, including six servants
and two horn players, and a pack of greyhounds onboard. Though the Admiralty
agreed, refitting the ship to accommodate Banks’ entourage made it so prone to
capsize that it failed a sea trial. When the modifications were stripped out,
Banks “swore and stamp’d upon the Warfe, like a Mad Man,” according to one
midshipman, and he took his entourage on a consolation trip to Iceland instead.2,4
According to Blue
Latitudes: “Banks would spend the rest of his long life reaping the rewards
of his youthful adventures, and dining out on them. Cook, lacking Banks’s
fortune and status, had more to prove. Even after his second voyage, which
sealed his fame and brought him the offer of a comfortable retirement, Cook
chose to set off again, ultimately at the cost of his life.”2
Carter noted the
uniqueness of the Endeavour voyage. It was “a collaboration of civilian
science under royal patronage with royal finance, joined with private
enterprise funded from a county rent roll and executed under Admiralty
management,” he wrote. “That these elements were compounded without undue heat
of fusion into a three-year circumnavigation successful in its main intentions
is a testimony to the character and abilities of Banks, the young landsman from
Lincolnshire, and Cook, the older Yorkshire seaman.”3
The Florilegium
During the voyage,
Banks and Solander supervised Parkinson’s work carefully. “We worked at the
great table in the cabin with our draftsman opposite. We directed his drawing,
and made rapid descriptions of our natural history specimens while they were
still fresh,” Banks wrote later.1
By the end of the
voyage, Parkinson had completed about 269 watercolor paintings of the collected
plant specimens. However, the ever-increasing number of specimens collected and
given to Parkinson prevented him from completing hardly any paintings from the
later parts of the voyage. Instead, he made precise outline drawings (at least
674) with detailed color notes, intending to complete them in color, in
preparation for engraving and publication after the voyage.1
Banks believed in
the importance of fine art for the presentation of scientific findings. He
personally was connected to many of the best botanical artists of his day, and,
sparing no expense, employed some of them to work on the Florilegium. In all,
he hired five artists (principally Frederick Polydore Nodder) to complete
Parkinson’s sketches, and 18 engravers (principally Daniel Mackenzie, Gabriel
Smith, and Gerard Sibelius) to create the copper-plate engravings. Banks
insisted that every detail be cut into each plate, so that even when the plates
were printed in black, the prints could still be used for scientific study. The
engraving process involved cutting directly into the polished copper, a
relatively soft metal, with different-sized tools called burins.1,5
According to a peer reviewer, the process also typically involves other tools,
such as etching needles, roulettes, and burnishers.
By 1784, all 743
plates had been completed, but Banks never saw them published for various
reasons.1,5 First, Solander’s death in 1782 hit him especially hard.
In addition, the American Revolution took a toll on his finances, and he often
was burdened by public duties (having become the president of the Royal
Society, for example). Furthermore, he may have believed he had already fulfilled
his obligation to science.1 After all, his large London home at Soho
Square had become a sort of salon-museum where scholars and the merely curious
could visit and admire his collections.1,4 It is worth noting that
if Banks had published his discoveries, some of the plants depicted in the
Florilegium would be the type specimens (i.e., specimens on which the
descriptions and names of new species are based) for some species now
recognized, according to Mabberley.1
It was not until
October 1979 that Alecto Historical Editions signed an agreement to print and
publish the plates in full color, in association with the Natural History
Museum. Before then, the plates were stored on the bottom shelf of a cupboard
in the Botany Library of the Museum, still in their original wrappers. The book
is dedicated to Christopher Humphries, PhD, whose idea it was for the Natural
History Museum (where he worked for most of his career) to collaborate with
Alecto Historical Editions and finally bring Banks’ Florilegium, a significant
but largely unknown scientific and artistic achievement of the Enlightenment,
to a broader audience. Humphries was a highly respected taxonomist,
biogeographer, and theorist, and a passionate lover of botanical art.
After some
dedicated trial and error, printers at Alecto Historical Editions realized the
stunning results that could be achieved by printing the plates à la poupée (French for “with the dolly”). Basically a
sophisticated exercise in “printing and coloring by numbers,” this technique involves
using a twist of cloth (the poupée or “dolly”) to selectively and
carefully apply, by hand, the appropriate color of ink into specific areas of
the plate.1,5
After a plate is
inked up with the various colors, it is laid on the press with a sheet of damp
paper over it. The plate is cushioned by cover tissue and blankets to even out
the pressure as it passes through the press rollers. The immense pressure from
the rollers pushes the damp paper into the recesses of the plate, pulling the
ink into the paper. The paper is then carefully and evenly peeled off to reveal
the print. Each plate is printed (or “pulled” in printmaking terms) just once
before it needs to be cleaned of leftover ink residue and re-inked for the next
pull.1,5
Between 1980 and
1990, the 25-person team at Alecto Historical Editions produced more than
86,000 prints from the Florilegium using this method, and some individual
prints are still available for sale on Alecto Historical Editions’ website. On
average, each print took just under one hour to complete, but some took
considerably longer, depending on complexity. The “dollies” used to apply the
inks were made from strong, coarse cotton, and the inks were made from boiled
linseed (Linum usitatissimum, Linaceae) oil and pure ground pigment.
Often, ten or more inks were applied to one plate. The printers used a master
print, which had been marked with the proper colors for each area of the plate,
as a reference when inking each plate.1,5
“Ever since we
first embarked on the Florilegium project in 1980, it was always my ambition to
publish a well-illustrated accompanying book,” wrote Studholme, who helped
oversee the printing process (email, March 1, 2018). “I am delighted that
Thames & Hudson has now fulfilled this ambition in such style, even though
it took another 38 years. But such longueurs do seem to be a feature of the
250-year history of Banks’
Florilegium!”
* According to a peer reviewer, in the 18th century, naval officers used ship’s time instead of civilian time, meaning that each day began at noon (pm coming before am). The Endeavour left Plymouth at 2 pm, so Cook, a naval man, recorded that it was August 26, while Banks, a civilian, wrote that it was August 25.
† One peer reviewer noted that Cook, at the time, held the rank of lieutenant, the minimum rank necessary for him to lead the expedition. But, anyone in charge of a ship is called captain, regardless of rank.
‡ Whether Cook claimed New Zealand for the Crown is debatable, according to a peer reviewer. After an event in Mercury Bay, North Island, in November 1769, Cook wrote, “after displaying the English Colours, I took formal possession of the place in the name of His Majesty.” But, Cook did not know he was on New Zealand at the time. He hoped he was on the mythical Southern Continent. It was not until later that he realized he was on land previously named by Abel Tasman. It is unclear if he was claiming Mercury Bay only, the North Island only, all of New Zealand, or the Southern Continent (which he did not find, thus making his claim invalid). Also, the Admiralty instructed Cook, “You are also with the Consent of the Natives to take possession of Convenient Situations.” There is no record that Cook received consent.
** According to a peer reviewer, Cook circumnavigated New Zealand to determine whether it was part of the unknown Southern Continent. “He even sailed away south from New Zealand when people onboard thought they could see land,” the reviewer noted. “None was ever found, only clouds in the distance that looked like high mountains of ice.”
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