Description: DESCRIPTION : Up for auction is a RARE ANTIQUE PRINT , Around 100 years old , Colorful HAND COLORED LITHOGRAPH of the COLLARED TROGON ( TROGON COLLARIS - HALSBANDSTROGON ) which was originaly first created in ca 1850 by JOHN GOULD and printed by C.J. HULLMANDEL . There were a few editions and I'm unable to identify this one , However judging by the PAPER and the LITHOGRAPHIC COLOR quality , It's definitely around 100 years old HAND COLORED LITHOGRAPH , Created by JOHN GOULD and printed C.J. HULLMANDEL - not a recent reprint !!! These ORIGINAL engraved or lithographic prints are being offered by art galleries worldwide for hundreds and thousands of Euros. Scientific description of the COLLARED TROGON ( TROGON COLLARIS ) on the verso in GERMAN. Size around 16 x 12" . Heavy stock. Very good condition . 4 tiny thumbtacks marks in far corners. ( Pls look at scan for accurate AS IS images ) . Will be sent in a protective rigid sealed packaging. AUTHENTICITY : This is an ORIGINAL vintage ca 100 years old LITHOGRAPHIC PRINT , NOT a reproduction or a reprint , It holds a life long GUARANTEE for its AUTHENTICITY and ORIGINALITY. PAYMENTS : Payment method accepted : Paypal . SHIPPMENT : SHIPP worldwide via registered airmail is $ 29 . Will be sent inside a protective package . Handling around 5-10 days after payment. GOULD, John (1804-1881). The Birds of Europe. London: Richard and John E. Taylor for the Author, [1832]-1837., large 2° (400 x 365 mm). fine hand-colored lithographic plate by Elizabeth Gould after her husband's sketches, printed by Charles Hullmandel.FIRST EDITION of Gould's first multi-volume ornithological work, the second of the folio series. As explicitly stated in the preface, the purpose of Gould's second work was to "supply the deficiency" of studies of local ornithology. The drawings of continental species were taken from specimens in museums and zoos in Holland, Germany and Switzerland, which Gould had toured several times in the 1830's, at least once with Lear, who was the first and greatest of the fine series of artists that he was to employ over the ensuing half century. Lear's influence is evident in many of the plates. His understanding of the possibilities that lithography offered and his mastery of the techniques involved contributed much to the founding of Gould's reputation. "There is no doubt that Edward Lear was the first person to understand the art of lithography, and to use it to its fullest potential. It was a legacy that granted the fabled works of Gould their success, and took them into the forefront of nineteenth-century illustration". (Isabella Tree, The Ruling Passion of John Gould, p. 43). Anker 169; Fine Bird Books p. 77; Nissen IVB 371; Wood p. 364; Zimmer pp. 251-252. (5)***** [Ornithology] Gould, John (British 1804-1881) and Elizabeth Gould (British, 1804-1841). hand-colored lithographs of terns. From "The Birds of Europe." London: 1832-37. Lithographed by Charles Joseph Hullmandel (British, 1789-1850). Plates are: Roseate Tern - Sterna Dougallii. ++ Common Tern - Sterna Hirundo.++ Little Tern - Sterna minuta. Framed, each: 21" x 28" Condition Under glass, not examined out of frame. **** Charles Joseph Hullmandel (15 June 1789 – 15 November 1850) was born in London, where he maintained a lithographic establishment on Great Marlborough Street from about 1819 until his death. He was born in Queen Street, Mayfair. His father was a German-speaking musician and composer, Nicolaus Joseph Hüllmandel (1751–1823), a native of Strasbourg who became a pupil of C. P. E. Bach and from 1780 spent ten years as a fashionable music teacher in Paris. In 1787 he married a Mademoiselle du Cazan, who was of a noble French family, and in 1789 sent his wife to England, following her in 1790, as the French Revolution unfolded.[1][2] As a young man, Charles Hullmandel studied art and spent several years living and working in continental Europe. He learned printmaking and printed many of his own works.[3] In 1818, he set up a printing press in London after a visit to Munich with Rudolph Ackermann,[4] and went on to study chemistry under Michael Faraday for the purpose of improving his printing.[3] During the first half of the 19th century Hullmandel became one of the most important figures in the development of British lithography, and his name appears on the imprints of thousands of lithographic prints. He developed a method for reproducing gradations in tones and for creating the effect of soft colour washes which enabled the printed reproduction of Romantic landscape paintings of the type made popular in England by J. M. W. Turner. Hullmandel's essay The Art of Drawing on Stone (1824) was an important handbook of lithography. In 1843 he went into partnership with Joseph Fowell Walton (born 1812, living 1863), a cousin of the landscape artist and lithographer W. L. Walton, the firm then becoming known as Hullmandel & Walton.[5] Grave of Charles Joseph Hullmandel in Highgate Cemetery The Aventino, from Twenty-four views of Italy (1818) The Monte Pincio, from Twenty-four views of Italy (1818) He died at Westminster in 1850[3][6] and was buried on the western side of Highgate Cemetery. **** **** The collared trogon (Trogon collaris) is a near passerine bird in family Trogonidae, the quetzals and trogons. It is found in Mexico, throughout Central America, and in northern South America.[2] Contents 1 Taxonomy and systematics 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behavior 4.1 Feeding 4.2 Breeding 4.3 Vocalization 5 Status 6 References 7 External links 8 Further reading Taxonomy and systematics[edit] The International Ornithological Committee (IOC) and the Clements taxonomy recognize these 10 subspecies of collared trogon. They treated T. c. aurantiiventris ("orange-bellied trogon") as a separate species until the late 2010s.[2][3] T. c. puella Gould (1846) T. c. underwoodi Bangs (1908) T. c. aurantiiventris Gould (1846) T. c. extimus Griscom (1929) T. c. heothinus Wetmore (1967) T. c. virginalis Cabanis & Heine (1863) T. c. subtropicalis Zimmer (1948) T. c. exoptatus Cabanis & Heine (1863) T. c. collaris Vieillot (1817) T. c. castaneus Spix (1824) BirdLife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World (HBW) recognizes eight subspecies, excluding T. c. aurantiiventris and T. c. underwoodi.[4] Description[edit] Trogons have distinctive male and female plumages, with soft, often colorful, feathers. The collared trogon is about 25 to 29 cm (9.8 to 11.4 in) long and weigh abouts 41 to 64 g (1.4 to 2.3 oz). Both sexes have a black face and throat. The male's crown, nape, back, and rump are bright metallic green. The folded wing shows black and white vermiculation. The breast is also metallic green with a white band separating it from the bright red belly and vent. The upperside of the tail is green with a black tip and the underside is barred black and white. The female is olive brown where the male is green, the closed wing is brown with black vermiculation, and the belly is a duller red than the male's. The underside of the tail is gray with a few black bars and white tips.[5] The male collared trogon is the national bird for Kenya because the colors are in the National flag. Distribution and habitat[edit] The 10 subspecies of collared trogon are found thus:[2][5] T. c. puella, central Mexico to western Panama T. c. underwoodi, northwestern Costa Rica T. c. aurantiiventris, central Costa Rica to western Panama T. c. extimus, eastern Darién Province in northeastern Panama T. c. heothinus, Panama's Serranía del Darién T. c. virginalis, western Colombia through western Ecuador into northwestern Peru T. c. subtropicalis, central Colombia, especially the Magdalena and Cauca valleys T. c. exoptatus, northern Venezuela (and Trinidad & Tobago?) T. c. collaris, east of the Andes from Colombia south to northern Bolivia and east through the Guianas and much of west central Brazil (and Trinidad & Tobago?) T. c. castaneus, southeastern Colombia south to eastern Peru and northern Bolivia and into northwestern Brazil; also eastern Brazil Clements places T. c. exoptatus in Trindad & Tobago; the IOC places T. c. collaris there instead. In South America the collared trogon inhabits humid lowland evergreen forest, both primary and well-established secondary. In Mexico and Central America it inhabits those forest types and in addition humid montane, semideciduous, and pine-evergreen forests. It is found as high as 2,400 m (7,900 ft) in Mexico and 2,300 m (7,500 ft) in Costa Rica, but in the Andes it is mostly below 1,300 m (4,300 ft) in Ecuador and 1,200 m (3,900 ft) in Peru.[5] Behavior[edit] The collared trogon usually perches between the higher understory and the lower part of the canopy. It is usually seen singly or in pairs, but small groups may gather outside the breeding season.[5] Feeding[edit] The collared trogon eats small fruits and invertebrates such as caterpillars, crickets, cicadas, and beetles. They often accompany the edges of mixed-species foraging flocks but do not mix with the other members.[5] Breeding[edit] The collared trogon's nesting season is highly variable across the species' wide distribution, beginning as early as November in French Guiana and as late as April in Venezuela. It nests in cavities in decaying wood or arboreal termite nests; the cavity is often so shallow that much of the bird is visible. The normal clutch size is two eggs. Both sexes incubate the eggs and care for the young.[5] Songs and calls Listen to collared trogon on xeno-canto Vocalization[edit] The collared trogon's song varies geographically. The Mexican and Central American populations sing "a plaintive 2-3 noted kyow'-kyow or caow' caow, and a faster kyow kyow-kyow". South American songs are described as "a series of mellow whistled notes, usually with a stuttered introductory note: whi'whi whew-whew-whew." Calls include "a prolonged charr" and a "snorting chur-r-r-r".[5] Status[edit] The IUCN has assessed the collared trogon as being of Least Concern. It has a very large, though not quantified, population and a very large range.[1] ****** Trogon collaris collaris: eastern South America north of the Andes, from Colombia east to the Guianas Trogon collaris virginalis: western Colombia and western Ecuador (south to El Oro) Trogon collaris subtropicalis: Central Colombia Trogon collaris [castaneus or eytoni]: central South America south of the Amazon, from Peru and Bolivia east to Pará; and eastern Brazil from Bahia to Rio de Janeiro Trogon collaris exoptatus: N Colombia, n Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago Trogon collaris heothinus: Eastern Panama (Darién) Trogon collaris puella: Tropical and subtropical central Mexico to w Panama Trogon collaris extimus: Subtropical e Panama **** Halsbandstrogon[2] (Trogon collaris) är en fågel i familjen trogoner inom ordningen trogonfåglar.[3] Innehåll 1Utbredning och systematik 2Status och hot 3Referenser 4Externa länkar Utbredning och systematik[redigera | redigera wikitext] Halsbandstrogon delas in i tio underarter med följande utbredning:[3] T. c. puella – centrala Mexiko till västra Panama T. c. underwoodi – nordvästra Costa Rica T. c. aurantiiventris – centrala Costa Rica och västra Panama T. c. extimus – nordöstra Panama T. c. heothinus – östra Panama (Darién) T. c. virginalis – västra Colombia till västra Ecuador och nordvästra Peru T. c. subtropicalis – centrala Colombia T. c. exoptatus norra Venezuela T. c. collaris – Colombia till norra Bolivia och västcentrala Brasilien, Guyanaregionen samt Trinidad och Tobago T. c. castaneus – sydöstra Colombia och nordvästra Brasilien till östra Peru och norra Bolivia; östra Brasilien [12] ebay5729 folder 203
Price: 125 USD
Location: TEL AVIV
End Time: 2024-09-01T10:28:58.000Z
Shipping Cost: 29 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Style: Antique
Age: Ca 1900's
Maker: JOHN GOULD & C. J. HULLMANDEL
Material: LITHOGRAPHIC PAPER
Original/Reproduction: Original
Color: Multi-Color
Country/Region of Origin: United Kingdom