and you thought fish were fun!
well the illustrator did with these! all images
courtesy of the Biodiversity Heritage Library,
they are from and
this is the official title, Fishes, crayfish and crabs, of various colors and extraordinary
figures, which one finds around the Moluccas islands and on the coasts of the
Austral lands,
let
me explain, In the early 18th century, publisher, bookseller, and apparent fish
enthusiast Louis Renard compiled the seminal compendium of
color-illustrated ichthyological studies,
the
volume contains more than 450 species rendered in vibrant hues that, while
somewhat anatomically accurate, feature embellishments in color and
characteristics,
many of the features found on the fish look like they belong on birds or even animals,
and some seem so psychotic, psychedelic,
a digital copy of Renard’s work, is available in the Biodiversity
Heritage Library, an incredible open-access digital
archive, overall, the library estimates that about 9 percent of the illustrations are fabricated, I would have thought a tad more, but there it is,
the
tome was published in three editions, and only 16 of the initial printing,
which happened between 1718 and 1719, are known to exist. Thirty-four copies of
the second version from 1754 remain, which is also the iteration shown here.
There are just six books left from the third printing in 1782, you can see the entire compendium in the digital library and to
enjoy the vivid illustrations off-screen, Maria Popova, of Brain Pickings, is selling masks
and prints of the enhanced creatures, I do collect in a small way
books on fish and fish keeping, but this one is well out of my grasp, so it is nice
to see that I can at least view it online, many thanks to the Biodiversity
Heritage Library.
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