This painting of Humboldt and Bonpland in a jungle hut was completed in 1856, more than fifty years after their expedition. Humboldt didn’t like it because the instruments depicted were inaccurate. (Illustration Credit ins.5)
Thomas Jefferson in 1805, just after he had met Humboldt in Washington, DC. Unlike the more stately portraits of George Washington, Jefferson is purposefully ‘rustic’ to convey an image of simplicity. (Illustration Credit ins.6)
Humboldt’s spectacular three-foot by two-foot
A fragment of an ancient Aztec manuscript that Humboldt purchased in Mexico (Illustration Credit ins.8)
Taken from an unauthorized atlas that illustrated Humboldt’s
A spread from an unauthorized atlas that accompanied
American artist Frederic Edwin Church followed in Humboldt’s footsteps through South America and combined scientific details with sweeping views. The exhibition of his magnificent five-foot by ten-foot
Humboldt in 1843, two years before he published the first volume of
According to Humboldt, this illustration was a very faithful representation of the library in his Berlin apartment in Oranienburger Straße. He welcomed his many visitors either in the library or in his study, just visible through the door. (Illustration Credit ins.13)
Ernst Haeckel’s drawings of medusae. He named the large one in the centre
Yosemite Valley, California. John Muir referred to the Sierra Nevada as the ‘Range of Light’. (Illustration Credit ins.15)