The images below are watercolour sketches by Isaac Sprague from the 1840s.
“Isaac Sprague (1811–1895) was born in Hingham, Massachusetts, and apprenticed with his uncle as a carriage painter. He was a self-taught landscape, botanical and ornithological painter. Sprague served as one of the assistants to John James Audubon on an ornithological expedition up the Missouri River (1843), taking measurements and making sketches. His diary of this expedition is in the Boston Athenæum.” [source]
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In 1845, Sprague met Asa Gray (1810–1888) of Harvard College, and, over many years, Sprague illustrated several of Gray’s works, including the plates for the atlas (1857) to “Botany. Phanerogamia” in Charles Wilkes’ United States Exploring Expedition During the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842 (1845–1876).[1] He also illustrated Asa Gray and John Torrey’s various volumes of the U. S. War Department’s Reports… (1855–1860), as well as works for George B. Emerson, George Goodale, and Alpheus Baker Hervey.
In 1960, Harvard University’s Houghton Library exhibited approximately 100 of Sprague’s paintings, drawings and illustrations. In 2003, Sprague’s works were included in the Hunt Institute’s exhibition American Botanical Prints of Two Centuries.
“The Athenæum is fortunate to have seventy-four of Sprague’s watercolor paintings of birds, drawn between 1839 and 1842.” [source]
- The ‘Art of Isaac Sprague’ collection is online at the Boston Athenæum website. [browse all images] [alternative collection landing page]
- The Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation has a page of biography/resources in relation to Isaac Sprague.
- The Hunt Institute (Carnegie Mellon University) also has a collection of thumbnail images of Sprague’s meticulous botanical line sketches in pencil, lithographic and engraved formats.
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