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Works of Art
One
of the greatest treasures of the San Diego Natural History Museum is
the library's collection of 1094 original watercolor paintings of California
wildflowers which were painted by Albert R. Valentien. These paintings,
exquisite in their attention to detail and breathtaking in their liveliness,
were commissioned by Ellen Browning Scripps, San Diego philanthropist,
in 1908. For ten years, Mr. Valentien devoted himself full-time to
this project, traveling about on backroads, collecting fresh specimens
and expanding his work to include trees, grasses, and ferns. He never
made a preliminary sketch, but painted directly on paper with an unerring
eye and hand, a fact which accounts for the freshness and vivid nature
of the paintings, even years later. His careful and accurate renderings
of the most minute details of flower, leaf and roots combined with
a superb sense of color and light resulted in botanical portfolios
of unsurpassed beauty as well as scientific accuracy.
The Valentien Project,
which began during November 1999, has entailed photographing, conserving,
documenting, and re-housing the entire collection. The culmination
of the project was the exhibition of
the paintings in December 2003.
Other
art treasures held in the library include 61 original watercolor paintings
of birds by Major Allan Brooks, and five by George Miksch Sutton. These
two artists are very well-known bird and wildlife artists, and their
work is avidly collected today. The Brooks paintings were commissioned
in 1911 by Ellen Browning Scripps for publication in W. L. Dawson's Birds
of California. The paintings by George Sutton are of Mexican birds.
All of these art treasures were generously donated to the San Diego
Natural History Museum by the Scripps family in 1933. |