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  • "Victoria or Port Philip" Archival Limited edition giclee after cartographer John Rapkin published by John Tallis & Co. Past of the last decorative atlases with decorative vignettes. www.historyrevisited.com.au
  • A vignette illustrating a familiar aspect of the Victorian Colony, the Adelaide River landscape with familiar willow-like trees.
  • The Kangaroo seems little unsure, since it was a unique animal that defied even the anatomical mastery of George Stubbs in 1772.
  • Here is another unfamiliar scene of natives fighting each other, not the settlers, as that would not be encouraging for curious onlookers.
  • Note the mistaken placement of a Maori family from New Zealand in the bottom lower vignette, characterised by their resplendant feather cloaks. This confusian was common with the massive amount of information newly available to artists and publishers at that time.

Giclee Tallis Map Victoria Port Phillip Australia Rapkin

$78.00

Product Description

Giclee, John Tallis & Company, John Rapkin, Victoria or Port Phillip, 1851-54

Conservation Quality Giclee of the last of the decorative edged map folios by John Tallis & Company, The Illustrated Atlas of Modern History of the World, originally published in London, 1851-1854.

Supplied with a  Limited Edition certificate /300.

John Tallis & Company

To collectors of maps, the name Tallis is a venerable one. It is associated with a pinnacle in decorative cartography world-wide. The maps he produced represent the end of an era in the production of grand decorative atlases. The Tallis trademark is the use of small vignettes, or illustrations depicting foreign scenes which are sensitively arranged within the cartography. It is for this reason we bring you these archival giclees. The original cartography was both drawn and engraved by John Rapkin. His source information for these maps was a collation from two sources: map publishers paid access to information concerning newly charted coasts-lines, and they also used information previously published by others.

 Tallis & Company employed various artists throughout the years to employ their trademark vignettes. The idea was to supply illustrations to satiate the great desire for foreign exotica, here supplied by the kangaroos and the unfamiliar indigenous inhabitants. The viewer was also reassured by familiar aspects, a view of the city of Melbourne and the Adelaide River landscape. These artists trained in the topographical tradition from provincial areas. As was the trend in the 1820’s and 1830’s, they came to London to apprentice themselves to a master engraver. Few, if any, of these talented people would ever travel to the Antipodes, so their designs were based on written records and preserved specimens in the Zoological collections. The Kangaroo seems a little unsure of himself, especially as the tail still looks like that of a domestic dog. This seems to have been an artist's conundrum since the attempt made by George Stubbs in 1772.

Other Details

Maps:
Australian
Tallis & Company:
Colonial

Product Reviews

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  1. Moari Surprize!!! 4 Star Review

    Posted by on 2nd Jan 2013

    Fascinating that tyranny of distance and the juxtapositioning of such different indigenous inhabitants! Still that is why we are lucky to be alive now, and can purchase the proof of what was known in these earlier days. Thankyou!

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