Insects and Colors between Art and Natural History - Mandrij, V.E.; Simonini, Giulia; (ed.) - Prospero Internet Bookshop

 
Product details:

ISBN13:9789004525115
ISBN10:9004525114
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:322 pages
Size:235x155 mm
Weight:1 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 101 Illustrations, color; 1 Tables, black & white
700
Category:

Insects and Colors between Art and Natural History

 
Publisher: BRILL
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

This volume explores how late sixteenth to late eighteenth-century European naturalists and artists perceived, recorded, examined, and presented the often complex relationship between insects ? especially lepidopterans ? and colors.

Long description:
This book explores how European naturalists and artists perceived, investigated, and presented the relationship between insects and colors from the late sixteenth to the late eighteenth century. The contributors to this volume examine the creative methods and strategies that were developed to record color-related information about insects through studies on Hoefnagel?s glazed metal and hand-coloring practices; the lepidochromy technique used in paintings by Marseus van Schriek and later naturalists; the representation of sexual dimorphism of color and variable color of caterpillars in the images of Goedaert, Merian, Albin, and Rösel von Rosenhof; the painting-by-numbers technique applied to Schäffer?s bookplates on Regensburg insects; Schiffermüller?s watercolor originals of caterpillars; and finally, the color fading of exotic cabinet specimens and how this issue was tackled by Abbot and Smith. The volume is lavishly illustrated with rare and unpublished images and offers new insights into the interrelation between natural history and visual practices concerning the color of insects, with a special focus on butterflies and moths.



Contributors are Harald Bruckner, Kay Etheridge, Beth Fowkes Tobin, Stefanie Jovanovic-Kruspel, Karin Leonhard, V.E. Mandrij, Kimberly Schenck, Stacey Sell, Giulia Simonini, and Friedrich Steinle.
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgements

List of Figures

List of Contributors

Preface



Introduction

V.E. Mandrij and Giulia Simonini



Insect Color in Joris Hoefnagel?s Ignis

Kimberly Schenck and Stacey Sell



?More True to Nature than Paintings?: Lepidochromy and the Color of Butterflies

V.E. Mandrij



The Biology of Color in Insects

Kay Etheridge



Painting by Numbers and Insect Illustrations in the Eighteenth Century: Jacob Christian Schäffer and Stephan Loibel

Giulia Simonini



The Colors of Lepidopterans: Ignaz Schiffermüller?s Caterpillar Watercolors and Their Iconographic Impact

Stefanie Jovanovic-Kruspel and Harald Bruckner



Color, Taxonomy, and Exotic Insect Specimens

Beth Fowkes Tobin



Index