A Flower-Hunter in Queensland and New Zealand.
With map and illustrations.
Sydney, Angus and Robertson, 1898
Rowan 'grew up in Victoria in a family which had an appreciation of natural history, gardens and art. While living in New Zealand, she was encouraged by her husband, Frederic Charles Rowan, to develop skills as a "wild flower" painter. Untrained, but talented and enthusiastic, she rapidly emerged as a competent artist and won important art prizes in Australia and overseas. This angered the purist art world which regarded her work as flower painting belonging in museums, not art galleries. The reality is that her work crossed the boundaries between art and natural history illustration. Much of her work is of a very high standard in both these disciplines. Her studies of flowers, insects and birds were often set in context, with the environment being done in an impressionist style. Ellis became obsessive about her work and her endeavours to find new subjects. Occasionally this took her into environments which were both difficult to get to and dangerous. Her working conditions in Western Australia and North Queensland were difficult; in New Guinea they were worse. It is often overlooked that she also painted north American flora and illustrated a text-book on the flora of the USA' (Australian National Botanical Gardens).
First edition; 8vo; frontispiece and 17 plates of which 1 is chromolithographic and double-page, two ownership inscriptions to front free endpaper, contents unevenly spotted; original green cloth blocked in gilt with a botanical design to the upper board, binding lightly rubbed at bumped at the extremities but overall cloth fresh, a very good copy; 272pp.
Provenance
Delivery
We offer secure and express delivery on all local and international orders of rare books, maps and prints placed through this website.