Calla Lily: An 18th Century Hand-colored Botanical Engraving by J. Weinmann
This is a beautiful original antique colored botanical mezzotint and line engraving of a flowering Calla Lily, which is finished with hand-coloring. It is entitled "Arum Aethiopicum Flore albo Odorato", published in 1736 as plate 174 by Johann Wilhelm Weinmann in his monumental publication "Phytanthoza Iconographia".
Creator: Johann Wilhelm Weinmann (1683 - 1741, German)
Creation Year: 1736
Dimensions: Height: 15.75 in (40.01 cm)
Width: 9.63 in (24.47 cm)
Medium: Engraving, Mezzotint
Condition: See description below.
This is a beautiful original antique colored botanical mezzotint and line engraving of a flowering Calla Lily, which is finished with hand-coloring. It is entitled "Arum Aethiopicum Flore albo Odorato", published in 1736 as plate 174 by Johann Wilhelm Weinmann in his monumental publication "Phytanthoza Iconographia".
Creator: Johann Wilhelm Weinmann (1683 - 1741, German)
Creation Year: 1736
Dimensions: Height: 15.75 in (40.01 cm)
Width: 9.63 in (24.47 cm)
Medium: Engraving, Mezzotint
Condition: See description below.
This is a beautiful original antique colored botanical mezzotint and line engraving of a flowering Calla Lily, which is finished with hand-coloring. It is entitled "Arum Aethiopicum Flore albo Odorato", published in 1736 as plate 174 by Johann Wilhelm Weinmann in his monumental publication "Phytanthoza Iconographia".
Creator: Johann Wilhelm Weinmann (1683 - 1741, German)
Creation Year: 1736
Dimensions: Height: 15.75 in (40.01 cm)
Width: 9.63 in (24.47 cm)
Medium: Engraving, Mezzotint
Condition: See description below.
This engraving is printed on laid chain-linked watermarked paper measuring 15.75" high and 9.63" wide. There are tiny faint spots at the edge of the lower margin and two spots of paint in the upper left, but the print is otherwise in excellent condition. There is a second calla lily print (#175 in Weinmann's "Phytanthoza Iconographia") that would make for a striking display grouping with this piece. It can be viewed by typing its reference # LU1173214163672 in the search field.
Johann Wilhelm Weinmann (1683-1741) was a German apothecary and botanist who was greatly respected for his writings on medicinal plants and herbs. He was born in Gardelegen, Germany, the son of a barber named Matthias Christian Weinmann. In 1710, Weinmann settled in Regensburg (also known as Ratisbon) and found work as an assistant to an apothecary. He was able to purchase his own apothecary shop in 1712, and his business acumen allowed him to acquire another apothecary that had gone bankrupt and turn it into a profitable enterprise. He went on to become a successful businessman, serving as a town councillor, commercial assessor, and city assessor.
Weinmann's most significant contribution to the field of botany in the 18th century was his creation of the botanical work "Phytanthoza iconographia" between 1737 and 1745, an ambitious eight-volume project featuring over 1,000 hand-colored engravings of over 4,000 plant species. The work is highly regarded for its comprehensive coverage of the plant world and for the quality and accuracy of its illustrations. It is considered the first important botanical work to use color engraved prints. Weinmann employed the renowned botanical illustrator Georg Dionysius Ehret to contribute drawings to the project. a well respected botanist and entomologist and one of the most influential European botanical artists of all time. Weinmann was greatly respected for his writings on medicinal plants and herbs, and "Phytanthoza iconographia" is recognized as a landmark botanical work, one of the most comprehensive botanical references of the eighteenth century. It has been described as a pioneering work of botanical prints and it remains today one of the most ambitious works ever undertaken. In addition to "Phytanthoza iconographia", Weinmann also published a work called "Catalogus Alphabetico ordine exhibens Pharmaca" in 1723, and contributed botanical notes as "Observationes und Anmerkungen" in the "Breslauer Sammlungen".