Woodpeckers "Le Petit Pic" An 18th Century Hand-colored Engraving by Martinet
This is a hand-colored engraving of male and female woodpeckers entitled "1. Le Petit Pie varie, 2. Sa Femelle" by Francois Nicolas Martinet, plate 598 from 'Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux' in association with Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon, first published in Paris in 1765 by Edme Louis Daubento. It depicts a male and a female woodpecker perched on branches of a tree.
Creator: François Nicolas Martinet (1731 - 1800, French)
Creation Year: 1765
Dimensions: Height: 12.63 in (32.09 cm)
Width: 9.38 in (23.83 cm)
Medium: Engraving
Condition: See description below.
This is a hand-colored engraving of male and female woodpeckers entitled "1. Le Petit Pie varie, 2. Sa Femelle" by Francois Nicolas Martinet, plate 598 from 'Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux' in association with Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon, first published in Paris in 1765 by Edme Louis Daubento. It depicts a male and a female woodpecker perched on branches of a tree.
Creator: François Nicolas Martinet (1731 - 1800, French)
Creation Year: 1765
Dimensions: Height: 12.63 in (32.09 cm)
Width: 9.38 in (23.83 cm)
Medium: Engraving
Condition: See description below.
This is a hand-colored engraving of male and female woodpeckers entitled "1. Le Petit Pie varie, 2. Sa Femelle" by Francois Nicolas Martinet, plate 598 from 'Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux' in association with Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon, first published in Paris in 1765 by Edme Louis Daubento. It depicts a male and a female woodpecker perched on branches of a tree.
Creator: François Nicolas Martinet (1731 - 1800, French)
Creation Year: 1765
Dimensions: Height: 12.63 in (32.09 cm)
Width: 9.38 in (23.83 cm)
Medium: Engraving
Condition: See description below.
This colorful and detailed hand-colored copperplate engraving is printed on high quality laid chain-linked paper, which measures 12.63" x 9.38". It is in excellent condition.
Francois Nicolas Martinet (1731-c1804) was a French naturalist, engineer and artist, particularly as a skilled engraver. He produced engravings for numerous publication on natural history. He is best known for his bird engravings. Martinet also illustrated many plays and operas by Voltaire and others, as well as creating landscapes and scenes of Versailles and portraits of royalty and aristocrats.
George Louis Leclerc Buffon (1707-1788) was a French aristocrat who became a very prominent and respected scientist and mathematician. He was the director of the Jardin des Plantes botanical garden in Paris. He published the 36 volume Histoire Naturelle, Générale et Particulière (1749-1788) which included Martinet's bird illustrations. These engravings were later published on their own in Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux.
Buffon was an early promoter of the the theory of evolution, recognized by Charles Darwin who acknowledged that "the first author who in modern times has treated it (evolution) in a scientific spirit was Buffon."