Botanical artist and royal flower painter Pierre-Joseph Redouté survived the turbulent political
upheaval to gain international recognition for his precise renderings of plants which remain as
fresh in the late 20th century as when first painted. Paris was the cultural and scientific
center of Europe during an outstanding period (1798 - 1837) in the illustration of plants, one
noted for the publication of several folio books with colored plates. Redouté contributed over
2100 published plates depicting over 1800 different species, many never rendered before.
Although relatively uneducated, Redouté left home in what was then part of
Luxembourg at the age of 13 to earn his living as an itinerant Belgian painter, doing interior
decoration, portraits and religious commissions. Becoming acquainted with the work of Dutch
flower painters Brueghel, Ruysch, van Huysum and de Heem, Redouté determined to become
an heir to the tradition.
In 1782 Redouté joined his elder brother, an interior decorator and scenery designer in
Paris. Cheveau, a Parisian dealer, brought the young artist to the attention of botanist, book
lover Charles Louis L'Héritier de Brutelle who greatly influenced his life and work thereafter.
Over his long career, Redouté painted the gardens at the Petite Trianon of Queen
Marie-Antoinette as her official court artist and, during the revolution and Reign of Terror, he
was appointed to document gardens which became national property. However, during the
patronage of the generous Empress Josephine, Redouté's career flourished and he produced
his most sumptuous books portraying plants from places as distant as Japan, South Africa
and Australia as well as Europe and America.
After Josephine's death, Redouté's significant fortunes fell until appointed as a master
of design for the Museum d'Histoire Naturelle in 1822 and awarded a Chevalier of the Legion
d'Honneur in 1825. Although particularly renowned for his botanical exploration of roses and
lilies, he thereafter produced paintings purely for aesthetic purposes including the celebrated
"Choix des plus belles Fleurs."
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