
Audubon Plate # 17, Carolina Turtledove
$400
Print size: 26 1/4" x 39 1/4";
image size: 19 1/2" x 24 1/2"
Click the small picture to see more detail.
Probably
painted about 1825 in Louisiana. The pair of birds at bottom was apparently done
first, since the limb on which the topmost bird sits is not connected to the branch on
which its mate is perched.
In this painting Audubon attempted, as he wrote, to
give "a faithful representation of two as gentle pairs of Turtles [doves] as ever
cooed their loves in the green woods. I have placed them on a branch of Stuartia,
which you see ornamented with a profusion of white blossoms, emblematic of purity and
chastity."
Though this bird was known to Audubon as the
Carolina turtle dove, its modern name is much more appropriate, for it is found throughout
the United Sates and its call suggests hopeless sorrow. This abundant and widespread
bird is equally at home in suburbs and farmlands, and the sharp whistling of its wings as
it takes flight is as familiar as its mournful call.
EHJ