Discovering Ferdinand Bauer - Completed
at Conference Room (Level 4), National Library of Australia
Friday, 20 October 2017 from 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time) + Add to calendar20/10/2017 12:3020/10/2017 13:30Australia/SydneyDiscovering Ferdinand BauerDiscovering Ferdinand Bauer
Friday, 20 October 2017 from 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time)
Organiser
Friends Executive Officer
02 6262 1551
friends@nla.gov.au
Address
Conference Room (Level 4), National Library of Australia
Parkes Pl W
Canberra
ACT 2600 Australia
Event web page: https://www.stickytickets.com.au/56337Conference Room (Level 4), National Library of Australia
Parkes Pl W
Canberra ACT 2600
AustraliaFriends Executive OfficerfalseDD/MM/YYYY2880
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Details
Presented in association with the Australian Garden History Society.
Botanical artist Ferdinand Bauer was the first European to record in detail and unprecedented range the unique plants and animals of Australia. In this lecture, David Stuart explores the work of Bauer, whose work is spread around the globe, with significant holdings in Vienna.
Bauer made a major contribution to a number of significant works on European botany including the Codex Liechtenstein and Sibthorp's work on the plants and flowers of the Mediterranean. But for Australians what makes him a figure of special interest is the work he completed after he was chosen by Sir Joseph Banks in 1801 to be the natural history draughtsman to the expedition to Terra Australis under Captain Matthew Flinders. This was to be the first circumnavigation of the continent of Australia.
Two hundred years later, Bauer’s illustrations of Australian flora and fauna are still remarkable, both as art and for their scientific value and he is internationally acclaimed as one of the greatest botanical artists of all times. His technique allowed him to reproduce form, tone and shading with extraordinary precision. His work is, however, spread around the globe. How we can access, and draw on, his remarkable record of Australian biodiversity remains an important challenge.
David Stuart was Australia's Ambassador to Austria from August 2012 until October 2016. He arrived with some knowledge of Ferdinand Bauer's importance in Australian botanical history, and his early engagement with the Museum of Natural History (NHM) in Vienna led to the first ever public exhibition by the NHM of Bauer's work, held in August 2015, and set the path for further collaboration between the NHM and Australian counterparts.
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Image: Bauer, Ferdinand, 1760-1826, [Stewartia serrata] [picture], [180-], watercolour, nla.obj-135228098
Where
Organiser Information rss
Friends Executive Officer
Friends of the National Library of Australia Inc.
02 6262 1551