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John Reeves - Pioneering Collector of Chinese Plants and Botanical Art (Hardcover)
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John Reeves - Pioneering Collector of Chinese Plants and Botanical Art (Hardcover)
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This is the story of the Reeves Collection of botanical paintings,
the result of one man's single-minded dedication to commissioning
pictures and gathering plants for the Horticultural Society of
London. Reeves went to China in 1812 and immediately on arrival
started sending back snippets of information about manufactures,
plants and poetry, goods, gods and tea to Sir Joseph Banks.
Slightly later, he also started collecting for the Society but
despite years of work collecting, labelling and packing plants and
organising a team of Chinese artists until he left China in 1831,
Reeves never enjoyed the same degree of recognition as other
naturalists in China. This was possibly because he had a demanding
job as a tea inspector. Reeves himself never claimed to be a
professional naturalist and the plant collecting and painting
supervision were undertaken in his own time. Furthermore, fan qui
(foreign devils) were restricted to the port area of Canton and to
Macau, so that plant-hunting expeditions further afield were
impossible. Furthermore, Reeves never published an account of his
life in the country, unlike Clarke Abel and Robert Fortune, but he
left us some letters, notebooks, drawings and maps. The Collection
is held at the Royal Horticultural Society's Lindley Library in
Vincent Square, London. It is a magnificent achievement. Not only
are the pictures accurate and richly coloured plant portraits of
plants then unknown in the West, but they stand as a record of
plants being cultivated in nineteenth-century Canton and Macau. In
John Reeves: Pioneering Collector of Chinese Plants and Botanical
Art, Kate Bailey reveals John Reeves' life as an East India Company
tea inspector in nineteenth-century China and shows how he managed
to collect and document thousands of Chinese natural history
drawings, far more than anyone else at the time.
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