WESTALL AND BAUER
In the National Library of Australia News (February 2007) I outlined the way in which the then Royal
Colonial Institute acquired the bulk of the drawings made by William Westall A.R. A. (1781 – 1850)
during the voyage around
These drawings are now owned by the National Library of Australia and have been reproduced
comprehensively in “Westall’s Drawings” published by the Royal Commonweath Society in 1962.
A few further pictures relating to
and now 19 pencil drawings of trees by this artist drawn between 1801 and 1806 have surfaced. They
were acquired by the
trees in
Westall travelled to
William Westall’s drawings of trees have recently occasioned comment. Prof. Michael Rosenthal, in
a lecture given to the
“Hawkesbury River No 3” (1802): “The drawing is immediately interesting in appearing to
cope easily with representing completely unfamiliar terrain and as unfamiliar trees”. Rosenthal also
referred to ”the ease with which Westall has drawn eucalyptus.”
This is only the most recent observation regarding Westall’s botanical work. Rex Reinits In “Early
Artists in
other of a banksias. Westall’s trees were to become quite a feature of his work in
Dr Bernard Smith in an essay within “Westall’s Drawings” stated that “Westall (made) drawings of the
eucalyptus, grass tree, palm, pandanus, hoop pine, banksias (etc) in their natural settings. They were
made, not as botanical records, but as working drawings for larger compositions”. Smith also drew
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attention to the fact that Westall became “increasingly concerned with the delineation of the peculiarities
of the Australian vegetation, an interest which led to individual tree studies.”
Bernard Smith noted the suggestion by Johann Lhotsky (1795 – 1866) made in W.J. Hooker’s “
Journal of Botany” in 1843 that the engravings of Westall’s pictures in Flinders’ “Voyage to Terra
Australis” (1814) inclined him to think Ferdinand Bauer (1760 – 1820) assisted Westall “for I know no
book where plants and groups of foreign trees…are portrayed with such surpassing beauty and truth”
Ferdinand Bauer, the botanical artist assigned to the “Investigator” voyage, was a superb artist and it is
doubtless reasonable to conjecture that the older man gave tuition to young Westall. Thomas Perry in the
introduction to “Westall’s Drawings” suggested that Westall “perhaps with Ferdinand Bauer by his
side” showed him how to portray “accurately the form and foliage of the vegetation”. However the 19
drawings which have now surfaced depicting trees drawn by Westall, many when Bauer was far distant
show the mistakenness of Lhotsky’s opinion and underline effectively the fact that Westall did not
need Bauer to assist him. Indeed, the authenticity of Westall’s work is confirmed by no less than four
founder members of the Linnaen Society, Aylmer Lambert, Jonas Dryander, Richard Salisbury and
William Maton who recommended William Westall in June 1805 to become a member of that Society,
to which he was duly elected in December of that year. One thing is now certain, if it was not before:
Elisabeth’s
William Westall’s Australian Sketches” (NLA, Canberra 1998) that “Westall did not have the
temperement for the painstaking and relentless work involved in scientific drawing” is groundless.
The nineteen sketches by William Westall are in the process of conservation and cataloguing but below
is a tentative listing (those in bold can be viewed). Original numbering has been retained.
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1. Calabash Tree.
2. Tamarisk Tree.
3. Castor Oil Tree.
4. Palm. Fan Palm?
5. Tall Tree. China/India?
6. Palm. Similar to”Westall’s Drawings” 120.
7. Tree with leguminous climber.
8. Palm
9. Pimiento.
10 Not known not
11 Possibly Australian tree with smaller drawings of fruit
There are no drawings 12 – 15
16 Asiatic tree – possibly lychee type fruit with the word “sour”
17 Asiatic tree – not known
18 Bamboo.
19 Fan Palm.
20 Palm.
21 Logwood.
22 Cotton Tree.
23 Palm -
There is also a drawing in the author’s possession similar to 18 Bamboo
sketches are the basis of Westall’s fine painting “The Hong Kong Merchants Garden” which was shown
at the
with the same title. There is both an oil and a water colour version of this picture – the latter once
owned by a renowned gardener Mr Loddiges of Hackney. In the manuscript by Robert Westall for the
obituary of his father Robert described the Chinese view with its “feathery bamboo and the ariel palm.”
(the word ariel was changed to lofty in the published article).
It is important to note that in “Westall’s Drawings” Thomas Perry notes with relation to three drawings
Nos 120, 121 and 122 that they “do not show sufficient botanical detail to permit positive identification.
None of them appears to be an Australian species and it is possible that these three drawings were made
during Westall’s visit to the
Botany Library that 6 and 19 above are of Australian trees.
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Together with the Westall drawings at the
Ferdinand Bauer. There is uncertainty about one, a Tree Fern because it is thought that it may be a
Westall drawing. The other five are of
time one might be forgiven for attributing them to him.
Five of the drawings have been fully catalogued. Two were reproduced by R. Nobbs in “
& its first settlements 1778 – 1814” (N. Sydney NSW). They were also reproduced by David Moore in
“
reverse of one drawing. There is one other drawing of
used here (not depicted in Nobbs’s book) is catalogued as “Grove of tree ferns with shallow valley
beyond and (left) stumps”.
Evidence of the long term relationship between Bauer and Westall is to be found in
Bauer’s great work “Flora Graeca”, a series of 10 volumes published between 1810 and 1840. In “The
Flora Graeca Story. Sibthorp, Bauer and Hawkins in the
“Bauer’s work stopped after the seventh title page; the remaining three were probably all executed by
William Westall, perhaps drawn by Imrie and not Bauer” Niniam Imrie, who died in 1820 was a
Captain in the Royals.The coloured engraving in Volume 9 (published 1837) entitled “Physcus” gives
W.Westall as the artist while those in Volumes 8 and 10 give no such information although attribution to
Westall would seem reasonable. Westall did quite a number of tasks for publishers bringing illustrations
by amateur artists up to the required standard for publication. This engraving is in the
Museum,
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sketched by Imrie during a stop on their way from
to have used it for a coloured drawing, now lost”
Walter Lack establishes in his book that Bauer and Westall discovered together the caniverous plant
Cephalotus follicularis Labill (Cephalotaceae) at King George’s Sound,
Year’s Day 1802 and it is clear Westall adopted Bauer’s colour coding, used to recall the colours of
botanical specimens, in his tree illustrations.
The overall experience of viewing the 19 drawings by William Westall in the collection at the Natural
Ferdinand Bauer and William Westall had a profound influence on each other during the voyage of the
“Investigator”, Bauer taking the role perhaps of “paternal guide” to balance Matthew Flinders’s more
authoritative orders and that Robert Brown, the ship’s naturalist with Bauer instilled a respect for botany
and scientific depiction that benefited Westall’s work in
botanical work was with trees; his trees are always accurate and well drawn, a definite bonus for any
topographical and landscape artist.
Richard J. Westall
Richard, Thank you so much for sharing your brillant knowledge. Indeed, I have enjoyed reading and digesting it.
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