British Parliament 1925 Vintage Lithograph

Bull Moose, Birds, Bears, Lions & Tigers  - Benson Moore 

These are three (3) (double-sided) 1934 prints depicting sketches by Benson B. Moore.

Printed on cream colored paper; Blank on reverse

Lions, Tigers, Beras, Bull Moose, and many more

These are 1934 Smithsonian Intritute prints, NOT original Moore artworks.

Age toning exaggerated in pictures (especially around edges)

Blank on reverse

Benson Bond Moore (1882-1974), landscape and animal-portrait painter, and etcher, was born in Washington DC and lived there for seventy years. He became a noted painter of scenes of nature.  From childhood, he had sketched animals, often at the National Zoo, and in later years he did over 3700 illustrations of animals in the newspaper, "The Evening Star's" series entitled "Nature's Children." He also did numerous paintings for the Smithsonian that were reproduced in their "Scientific Series."

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This print(s) is of an animal(s) that was a resident in the 1930s of the The National Zoological Park, commonly known as the National Zoo, one of the oldest zoos in the United States. It is part of the Smithsonian Institution.

The Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute began as the dream of William Temple Hornaday, chief taxidermist at the Smithsonian from 1882 to 1887. During a trip to the western United States in 1886, he was shocked and troubled by what he didn’t find—large herds of American bison. The species, which once roamed the American West by the millions, was reduced to a few hundred animals. The bison’s near extinction sparked Hornaday’s crusade to save it and other endangered species from disappearing completely. He became the first head of the Department of Living Animals at the Smithsonian later that year, and brought 15 North American species to live on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. The deer, foxes, prairie dogs, badgers, lynx and bison were the animals that started what would eventually become the National Zoological Park.

In 1889 President Grover Cleveland officially signed an act of congress into law creating the National Zoological Park for “the advancement of science and the instruction and recreation of the people.” Two years later, the animals who had been living on the National Mall had a new home. Frederick Law Olmsted, the premiere architect of the day, designed the Zoo within Rock Creek Park in northwest Washington, D.C., which officially opened in 1891.

These are almost one-of-a-kind images produced mostly just for the Smithsonian Institute to document scientific and historical studies.


Published in 1934 by The Smithsonian Institute

Medium Size - Full Page Size: Approximately 5.5" X 8"

Condition: Excellent - Very Good - Good - Fair - Poor (but of historical interest)

This Old Print(s) isn't Perfect but close - Minor handling wear & aging

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Important: P/H is combined on multiple items that can be mailed together. BUT, with the new Ebay shopping cart, you must wait for combined invoice.

The Fine Print


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The Nature of Prints & Engravings: It was not until the 20th century that prints were commonly produced for the print itself. Prior to this, virtually all prints (and engravings) were produced as illustrations to be included in a manuscript, book, newspaper, or pamphlet. Therefore, a vast majority of original prints have been over the years removed from these original sources. Prints are produced using many different techniques: relief printing (woodcut & wood engraving), intaglio printing (steel & copper plate engraving, drypoint, aquatint, etc), and planographic printing (lithography, serigraphy, inkjet, laser, etc.).  While the commercial value of a print depends on such factors as age, rarity, and condition, the real value of a print is its tie to its history and/or its esthetic beauty.

History-On-Paper


Item #1021-W769-SI