Isaac Sprague
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Isaac Sprague (September 5, 1811 - 1895) was a self-taught landscape, botanical, and ornithological painter. He was America's best known botanical illustrator of his day.
Sprague was born in Hingham, Massachusetts and apprenticed with his uncle as a carriage painter.
In 1843, Sprague served as an assistant to John James Audubon on an ornithological expedition up the Missouri River, taking measurements and making sketches. Young Sprague first met Audubon when the older man admired Sprague's bird drawings in 1840. His diary of this expedition is in the Boston Athenaeum. Sprague's Pipit (Anthus spragueii), an uncommon and inconspicuous bird, was discovered on that expedition and named for Sprague. Some of Sprague's fine drawings were incorporated into Audubon's later publications, without credit.
In 1844 Sprague met Asa Gray (1810–1888) of Harvard College, and over many years illustrated several of his works including the plates for the atlas (1857) to Gray’s "Botany. Phanerogamia" in Charles Wilkes' United States Exploring Expedition During the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842 (1845–1876). He also illustrated Asa Gray and John Torrey's various volumes of the U. S. War Departments Reports... (1855–1860), as well as works for George B. Emerson, George Goodale, and Alpheus Baker Hervey.
In 1960 Harvard University's Houghton Library exhibited approximately 100 of Sprague’s paintings, drawings and illustrations. In 2003 Sprague's works were included in the Hunt Institute’s exhibition American Botanical Prints of Two Centuries.
Major collections of Sprague's work are held by the Boston Atheneum, the Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), the Smithsonian Institute (on indefinite loan to the Hunt Institute for Botanical Verification, Carnegie Mellon University), and by Harvard University.
[edit] Selected illustrations
- 1842 Botanical Text-book by Asa Gray
- 1856 Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States by Asa Gray, ed. 2
- 1848 White Mountain Scenery by William Oakes
- 1848-1849 Genera Florae Americae Boreali-Orientalis by Asa Gray
- 1855-1860 Reports of Explorations and Surveys, to Ascertain the Most Practicable and Economical Route for a Railroad Route from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, U. S. War Department
- 1875 Report on the Trees and Shrubs Growing Naturally in the Forests of Massachusetts, George B. Emerson, ed. 2
- 1876-1882 Wild Flowers of America by George Goodale
- 1882 Beautiful Wild Flowers of America by Alpheus Baker Hervey
- 1883 Flowers of Field and Forest by Alpheus Baker Hervey
- 1883 Wayside Flowers and Ferns by Alpheus Baker Hervey
[edit] References
- Emanuel D. Rudolph, "Isaac Sprague, 'Delineator and Naturalist'" in the Journal of the History of Biology (1990, vol. 23, no. 1, pp. 91–126).