Author: Richard Mabey
Publisher: Vintage
ISBN:
Category : Botanical illustration
Languages : en
Pages : 202
Book Description
The 300 Victorian flower paintings recently discovered in the attic at Frampton Court in Gloucestershire represent one of the earliest and most intriguing collections of amateur flower paintings to be found to date. They are bold, exactly observed, and beautifully and skilfully executed. Those by Charlotte Anne Purnell in particular show an undiluted talent that must now rank her among the best of her generation. Between 1828 and 1851, the sisters Elizabeth, Charlotte, Catherine and Mary Anne Clifford, and their aunts Charlotte Anne, Catherine Elizabeth and Rosamond, explored minutely their corner of south-west Gloucestershire, and succeeded in painting an impressive number of its native plants. Their chief inspiration was simply the area they lived in. Frampton lies in the Vale of Berkeley, an area of mixed farming, criss-crossed by dykes and streams. The River Severn is just one mile to the west, and five miles to the south was Charlotte Anne's house, Stancombe Park, with its landscaped grounds set amonst the wild Cotswold beechwoods. The Frampton Flora is Richard Mabey's account of the wild flowers, the painters and their paintings, as well as an enduring record of the richness of the English countryside in the early 19th century. Illustrated in colour throughout, this uniquely beautiful book seeks to recreate the charm and intimacy of the original notebooks in which the watercolours were found.