McGill Library
McLennan Library Building3459 rue McTavish
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 0C9
Great-billed Alexandrine Parrakeet [female]
Alexandrine Parakeet female
Psittacula eupatria
Item
1 watercolour painting ; 56 x 39 cm + 1 leaf
Peter Paillou was born in London into a Huguenot family and was recognised in his own time as an eminent ‘bird painter’. In 1744 he began to paint for Taylor White and worked for him for almost thirty years, painting chiefly birds and mammals. He painted as well for Robert More, Joseph Banks, and for the Welsh naturalist Thomas Pennant. Many of his paintings of birds were used as the basis for book illustrations, often engraved by his colleague and fellow Huguenot, Peter Mazell. Paillou was elected to the Society of Artists and in 1763 he exhibited ‘A Piece of Birds, in Watercolours; the Hen of the Wood and Cock of the Red Game’. In 1778, to considerable approval, he also showed a picture of ‘A Horned Owl from Peru’, completely made from feathers.
Drawing of a female Alexandrine Parakeet from a 18th century specimen [modern geographical distribution: the Palearctic and the Indo-Malayan Realm.] Attributed to Peter Paillou.
Manuscript note on front of drawing: Great-billed Alexandrine Parrakeet [female] (Paloeornis magnirostris)
Manuscript note on back of drawing: Psitacus macrourus Viridis Bengalensis femina
Scientific name: Psittacula eupatria
With manuscript text on accompanying leaf.
Transcription of manuscript note on accompanying leaf: Benghalensis major
Famina [Femina]
In Femina hujus species Lineae
Circularae nigrae desunt
The Hen of the Great
Benghall Parroquet
Translation of manuscript note on accompanying leaf: Benghalensis major
Famina [The female great Benghall Parroquet]
The black lines encircling [the neck] are absent in the female of
this species.
The Hen of the Great
Benghall Parroquet