Book collects French monk’s forgotten animal drawings
More than three centuries ago, a French monk named Father Charles Plumier made thousands of drawings of plants and animals, traveling under the authority of King Louis XIV to the French Antilles to collect and document the natural history of the islands. These drawings were often the first ever recorded for each species and feature remarkable detail.
The illustrations were nearly lost forever during the tumultuous French Revolution, and the volumes compiled by Plumier were discovered by chance, found serving as stools for the monks to sit on by the fire in the convent where he lived.
Now, the illustrations are safely held in a national library in France, but they have never been published as Plumier intended.
Ted Pietsch, a professor emeritus of aquatic and fishery sciences at theUniversity of Washington, and curator emeritus of fishes at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, has published the first of several volumes showcasing the work of the French naturalist. After many trips to France and a bit of investigative work, Pietsch has compiled Plumier’s fish drawings in a new book, Charles Plumier and His Drawings of French Caribbean Fishes (Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, 2017).
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