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BERLESE, Laurent, Abbé

Iconographie du genre camellia ou description et figures des camellia les plus beaux et les plus rares
Paris
H. Cousin
1839/43
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3 vol. in folio (37.5 x 28 cm), half-titles, 4 leaves of text addressed to the members of the Société Royale d'Horticulture de Paris (vol. 3), some browning on a few pages, 300 engraved plates printed in colors and finished by hand, by Oudet (293), Gabriel (4) and A. Duménil (2) and one unsigned, all after J.-J. Jung, printed by N. Rémond. Contemporary half brown morocco, spines gilt in five compartments, brown buckram covers. Bindings with some wear and rubbing. Good clean copy with large margins

"A fine set of the most influential monograph on camellias by the greatest camellia scholar of the nineteenth century. The present set includes the apparently unrecorded four-page introduction addressed to ""Messieurs les membres de la Societé Royale d'Horticulture de Paris"" and an autograph letter from Berlèse to a fellow horticulturist. Laurent (or Lorenzo) Berlèse was the greatest camellia expert of the nineteenth century. He was born in Campo Molino near Treviso, Italy, but carried out the majority of his research into the genus in France, using his private wealth to establish his own nursery and hothouses near Paris. Seeing the need for a formal classification system of the family, he first suggested that they be grouped according to a color gradation system. He first published the results of his researches in 1837 in his Monographie du genre Camellia, a revised edition of which was published in 1840. By 1845 he had abandonned the color system in favor of classification based on flower shape. In this third edition he listed 701 varieties. The accompanying one-page autograph letter is dated 8 January 1843 and addressed to M. Gruneberg fils, horticulturist of Frankfurt. He tells M. Gruneberg of his admission to the Societé Royale d'Horticulture de Paris. He then goes on to thank Gruneberg for sending him a new variety of camellia (Camellia Teutonica) and to say that other growers are already claiming to possess examples of the new variety. Berlèse writes this off as mere ""jalouise commerciale."" Working with the Frankfurt-born artist J.-J. Jung, who was a fellow member of the Societé Royale d'Horticulture de Paris, Berlèse began publication of the present work with a subscription list of 250. The work appeared in parts, each containing two plates with accompanying text, between 1839 and 1843. In the prospectus, Berlèse announced that the work would be illustrated by lithographs but he was apparently so dissatisfied with the quality of the color reproduction that he turned to handcolored engraving instead. In the introduction, Berlèse describes the work: ""My Iconographie was not produced solely for commercial reasons, it is also a work of art, and a scientific treatise. My principal reason for publishing the Iconographie was to provide a faithful reproduction of nature, and to provide libraries with a book which accurately represented one of the most beautiful flowers of Asia and recorded the progress made in its study in Europe by both Art and Science. This is the task I set myself and I believe that it has been accomplished."" Both the introduction and accompanying letter hint at Berlèse's dissatisfaction with the commercial side of camellia growing. This may explain his decision, taken in 1846, to abandon camellias. He sold the whole of his collection to a commercial nurseryman, gave up his studies, and returned to Italy, where he died in 1863"