Parus Xanthogenys, Parus Monticolus. Birds from the Himalaya Mountains, engraving 1831 by Elizabeth Gould and John Gould. John Gould was working as a taxidermist,he was known as the 'bird-stuffer', by the Zoological Society. Gould's fascination with birds from the east began in the late 1820s when a collection of birds from the Himalayan mountains arrived at the Society's museum and Gould conceived the idea of publishing a volume of imperial folio sized hand-coloured lithographs of the eighty species, with figures of a hundred birds. Elizabeth Gould made the drawings and transferred them to the large lithographic stones. They are called Gould plates.
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Parus Xanthogenys, Parus Monticolus, Asian, Himalayan, Himalayas, bird, exotic, tailed, illustration, 1830s, 1831, 1832, 19th Century, Animal, Animal Behaviour, Animal Marking, Arkheia, Animal Pattern, Artist British, Artist European, Background, Bird, Bizarre, Books & Manuscripts, British Artist, Close Up, Close-Up, Closeup
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