Quality Guaranteed | 100% Authentic Antique Maps | Museum Quality Custom Framing

Cattleya Dawsoni: Fitch, c.1865

Regular price
$595.00
Sale price
$595.00
Regular price
Sold
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

  • Title: Cattleya Dawsoni
  • Author: Walter Hood Fitch
  • Date: c.1865
  • Condition: Excellent
  • Inches: 10 3/8 x 14 1/4 [Image]
  • Centimeters: 26.35 x 36.19 [Image]
  • Product ID: 308443

Cattleya Dawsoni is a medium-sized epiphytic orchid species native to Venezuela, specifically found on the northern coastal range in low, scrubby hills at altitudes from 0 to 500 meters. It was first described by Reichenbach in 1854, named in honor of the gardener Dawson associated with M. Pescatore of Paris.

Background on Creator

Walter Hood Fitch (1817-1892) was born in Glasgow, Scotland. From a young age, he demonstrated artistic talent and began formal training as a pattern drawer at a textile mill by the age of 13. This early apprenticeship, which involved creating intricate designs for calico fabric and mastering the complex process of engraving and color matching, laid the technical foundation for his later work as a botanical illustrator.

Fitch’s career in botanical art began after a pivotal meeting with William Jackson Hooker, the Regius Professor of Botany at Glasgow University and editor of Curtis’s Botanical Magazine. Impressed by Fitch’s skill and attention to detail, Hooker bought him out of his apprenticeship and employed him to produce botanical illustrations for the magazine. Fitch’s first published lithograph, of Mimulus roseus, appeared in 1834.