Aloe Africana, Flore Rubro
Maker
Georg Dionysius Ehret
(German, 1708 - 1770)
Additional Title(s)
- Gasteria Disticha
Collections
ClassificationsDRAWINGS
Daten.d.
Mediumopaque watercolor and pen and black ink on laid paper
Dimensions21 1/4 x 15 in. (54 x 38.1 cm.)
SignedSigned in lower right of recto: G.D. Ehret.f.
InscribedSigned in lower right of recto: G.D. Ehret.f.
Inscribed in lower center of recto: Aloe Africana, flore rubro, folio maculis albicantibus ab utraque parte notato. H. A.
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Label TextNative to southern Africa, aloes were grown in hothouses by English horticulturists as exotic specimens. In this image, German botanical illustrator Georg Ehret describes the full length of the plant’s flower cluster, illustrating a few buds separately and removing the outer petals of one, to give as much information as possible. Before settling in England, Ehret had collaborated with Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus, who developed the practice of binomial nomenclature, the Latin naming system still used today to identify the genus and species parts of the formal scientific name. According to Linnaeus, the configuration of the male and female organs determines the plant’s class and order (2022).Status
Not on viewObject number84.27.2
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