AFTER JOHN JAMES AUDUBON (1785-1851), BY ROBERT HAVELL (1793-1878)
AFTER JOHN JAMES AUDUBON (1785-1851), BY ROBERT HAVELL (1793-1878)
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AFTER JOHN JAMES AUDUBON (1785-1851), BY ROBERT HAVELL (1793-1878)

Snowy Owl (Plate CXXI)

Details
AFTER JOHN JAMES AUDUBON (1785-1851), BY ROBERT HAVELL (1793-1878)
Snowy Owl (Plate CXXI)
Nyctea scandiaca
engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring, circa 1831, on watermarked J Whatman paper dated 1831, with margins, framed
35 x 22 5⁄8 in. (89.2 x 57.5 cm.) image to neat line on 38 x 25 ¼ in. (96.7 x 64.3 cm.) sheet

Brought to you by

Peter Klarnet
Peter Klarnet Senior Specialist, Americana

Lot Essay

One of the most striking prints in all of Aububon's Birds of America. The Snowy Owls are one of only three night scenes in that monumental work. Two birds are depicted, one male and one female, both perched on their own branch and alert for prey. "Since Audubon was aware that Snowy Owls typically hunt during the day or early evening, he likely wished the setting in this composition to represent the dusk of a gathering storm rather than a nightscape" (Blaugrund and Stebbins, p.184) and indeed the light peeks out from behind the topmost cloud. Nonetheless, the dramatic dark background heightens the contrast with the birds' plumage and their stark perch of a dead tree trunk to superb decorative effect. See Low, p.93.

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