Credit: ©The Royal Society
Image number: RS.10969
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'Aloe Africana'
Date
[c.1735]
Creator
Georg Dionysius Ehret (1708 - 1770, German)
Object type
Archive reference number
Material
Dimensions
height (drawing (framed)): 710mm
width (drawing (framed)): 532mm
width (drawing (framed)): 532mm
Subject
Content object
Description
Botanical study of Aloe africana, caulescens, follis glaucis, caulem amplectentibus [modern taxonomy Aloe arborescens, also commonly known as the krantz aloe or candelabra aloe], native to South Africa. The composite study shows the stalk, flower, and leaves of the succulent plant, alongside two flowers falling from the plant, one closed and one partially open, and an enlarged detail of a leaf.
Inscribed in ink beneath the image with the name of the specimen ‘Aloe africana, caulescens, follis glaucis, caulem amplectentibus’, and in the bottom left hand corner beneath the image, with the signature of the artist ‘G D Ehret p [pinxit]’.
Georg Dionysius Ehret was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1757.
Inscribed in ink beneath the image with the name of the specimen ‘Aloe africana, caulescens, follis glaucis, caulem amplectentibus’, and in the bottom left hand corner beneath the image, with the signature of the artist ‘G D Ehret p [pinxit]’.
Georg Dionysius Ehret was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1757.
Object history
Part of a collection of 35 botanical paintings by Georg Dionysius Ehret and Jacobus van Huysum, primarily of Aloes, depicting specimens from the yearly collection sent by the Society of Apothecaries Physic Garden at Chelsea to the Royal Society. This means of capturing the specimens was initially proposed by Taylor White who presented a collection of watercolours by van Huysum in 1734. Philip Miller (1691 – 1771), Gardener to the Society of Apothecaries and Fellow of the Royal Society, was asked by the Council to select the plants to be preserved in this way in 1734, and references to this commission occur in the Society records up to 1737.
Associated place