Marianne North

Abundant Beauty


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      ABUNDANT BEAUTY

      The Adventurous Travels of

      MARIANNE NORTH

      — Botanical Artist —

      . . . . . . . .

      INTRODUCTION BY LAURA PONSONBY

       ABUNDANTBEAUTY

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      Copyright © 2010 by Greystone Books

      Introduction © 2010 by Laura Ponsonby

       First U.S. edition 2011

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      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior written consent of the publisher or a licence from The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). For a copyright licence, visit www.accesscopyright.ca or call toll free to 1-800-893-5777.

      These are excerpts from Recollections of a Happy Life: Being the Autobiography of Marianne North, edited by her sister Mrs. John Addington Symonds, in three volumes; first published in New York and London by MacMillan and Co., 1894.

      Greystone Books

      An imprint of D&M Publishers Inc.

      2323 Quebec Street, Suite 201

      Vancouver BC Canada V5T 4S7

      www.greystonebooks.com

      Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication North, Marianne, 1830-1890 Abundant beauty : the adventurous travels of Marianne North, botanical artist.

      ISBN 978-1-55365-541-1

      1. North, Marianne, 1830-1890—Travel. 2. Botanical artists—England—Biography. I. Title.

       QK31.N67A3 2010 580.92 C2009-907057-X

      Cover and text design by Heather Pringle

       Maps by Eric Leinberger

       Cover image © RBGKew

       Printed and bound in Canada by Friesens

       Printed on acid-free, FSC-certified paper that is forest friendly (100% post-consumer recycled paper) and has been processed chlorine free

      Distributed in the U.S. by Publishers Group West

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      CONTENTS

      . . . . . . . .

       Editor’s Preface

       Marianne North: An Introduction by Laura Ponsonby

       Brazil 1872–73

       California and Japan 1875–77

       India 1878

       Australia 1880–81

       South Africa 1882–83

       Afterword by Mrs. John Addington Symonds

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      EDITOR’S PREFACE

      MARIANNE NORTH was an accomplished painter, knowledgeable botanist, enthusiastic traveller, and prolific diarist. Selected from three volumes—including writing about travels in almost thirty countries—the excerpts from North’s diaries in this edition cover six countries on five continents.

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      A marker like the one above indicates an abridgement to the text. Each chapter may not begin where Marianne North started writing or end at the close of her own diary entry. But each chapter will provide an understanding of her experiences and perhaps even make you feel that you are along with her, riding in the jampany or on the back of a mule, or walking— parasol and painting easel in hand—through the lush jungle or the dense rainforest, in search of new subjects for her canvas.

      Although she was more adventurous and expressive than most, Marianne North was very much a citizen of her own time and place—a late-nineteenth-century privileged British woman, with many of the common attitudes and ways of thinking of the time. Some of these attitudes—especially in matters of race and indigenous culture—would not be acceptable today. But readers will agree that, for the most part, Marianne North approached the world in all of its diversity with an open and intelligent mind, an engaging curiosity, and a generous spirit.

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      MARIANNE NORTH:

      AN INTRODUCTION

      . . . . . . . .

       by Laura Ponsonby

      MARIANNE NORTH was a remarkable Victorian artist who travelled around the world to satisfy her passion for painting plants. At a time when women rarely travelled alone, many of North’s expeditions to remote areas of the globe were fraught with danger, but also with adventure and opportunity. The artistic results of these epic journeys can be seen in the Marianne North Gallery at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, which was designed by her friend James Fergusson and generously donated by the artist herself. Entering the gallery for the first time and seeing tier upon tier of brilliantly coloured oil paintings of plants, landscapes, birds, and animals is a breathtaking experience. The collection includes more than eight hundred paintings, completed in less than thirteen years of travel, and under them a dado made of 246 types of exotic woods collected by North. The gallery is believed to hold the only permanent solo exhibition by a woman painter in Britain and is certainly one of Kew’s greatest treasures.

      MARIANNE NORTH WAS BORN IN Hastings, Sussex, in 1830, the elder daughter of Janet North and Frederick North, Liberal Member of Parliament for Hastings. She spent much of her youth travelling in England and Europe, and although she took a sketchbook, as was customary for young Victorian women travellers, music was her mania. It was only when her beautiful contralto voice deserted her that she took up painting in earnest, first in watercolour and later in oils.

      Through her father’s connections, North knew many people who encouraged and supported her work. She received some tuition from the Dutch flower artist Magdalen von Fowinkel, and from Valentine Bartholomew, flower painter to Queen Victoria. In 1867, Robert Dowling, an Australian artist who lived in London, introduced North to oil paints. It was an event that changed her life, so that painting became, in her words, “a drug like dram-drinking, almost impossible to leave off once it gets possession of one.” Edward Lear, the nonsense writer and brilliant artist, was also a great friend and an admirer of her colourful paintings.

      When North was twenty-four, her mother died and on her death bed made her daughter promise never to leave her father. True to her vow, North and her father continued travelling to Egypt, Syria, and various European countries. It was on excursions to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, that she became aware of glorious tropical flora. Sir William Hooker, the director, once gave North a beautiful hanging bunch of flowers of Amherstia nobilis, a tree from Burma, which made her long to visit the