A
Bien Edition Reissue ? By Ron
Flynn Click here to buy the Audubon Price Guides For many years, the question of whether there
was a reissue of the Audubon Bien Edition has gone unanswered. No record
or documentation of such has been found, and nothing definitive has been
written on the subject. Yet, based solely on the appearance and quality
of prints found in the marketplace today, dealers and authors have
freely debated the subject from time to time. Perhaps as many say there
was, as say there was not a reissue. We know that production of the Bien Edition
ceased in 1860, with only 105 sheets, containing 150 images, being
issued. The failure of the Bien Edition resulted in a bankruptcy and
near financial ruin for the Audubon family during the Civil War. Roe
Lockwood & Co. of New York was the Audubon’s major business
partner in the Bien project, and became the Audubon’s main creditor in
the bankruptcy. They ultimately gained publishing rights to all the Bird
and Quad Editions that the Audubons published in the United States, as
well as possession of the original lithographic stones, and probably all
remaining inventory of plates and letterpress. As a result, the Lockwoods published editions of the Octavo
Birds and Quads and Imperial Folio Quads between 1865 and 1871. Isn’t
it likely they also published a reissue of the Bien Edition during that
period? Alice Ford, in her 1964 book John James
Audubon, claims that the Bien Edition lithographic stones were
shipped to a New Orleans warehouse and subsequently destroyed by Union
shelling during the Civil War. Ford cites no source or reference for
this claim, and no other author or researcher has uncovered proof of
Ford’s theory. However, known historical facts make Ford’s claim
less believable. Well before the first shots were fired at Fort Sumter
on April 12, 1861, it was well known in the North that a Civil War was
inevitable, and preparations were already being made. It wouldn’t have
made sense to ship the Bien stones into the Deep South for storage, when
they could have been shipped further North if their safety was ever a
concern. Secondly, all other Audubon lithographic stones, as well as the
original Havell copperplates, were stored in the Philadelphia and New
York areas, and no one has ever suggested that they were moved for
safety during the Civil War. Finally, the Bien stones were Audubon
assets and an integral part of the Audubon bankruptcy. A bankruptcy
court simply would not have allowed the stones to be removed to New
Orleans. It seems much more plausible that the Bien
stones remained in New York, and as a result of the bankruptcy, became
the property of the Lockwood family. George Lockwood, in a c1877 letter,
reported that all the Audubon stones were destroyed in the collapse of a
Philadelphia storage warehouse. Though an inventory of destroyed stones
was not provided, no further account of the fate of Audubon lithographic
stones has been discovered or published. If you discount Ford, it is
certainly possible that the Lockwood family, or another printer,
attempted a Bien reissue using the original stones. It has been well documented that the Boston firm
of Estes and Lauriat received a large quantity of remaining Bien prints,
after the collapse of the project, and sold them until all were gone
c1889. Whether E. & L. acquired the prints directly from the
bankruptcy court, or from the Lockwoods, and whether the Lockwoods also
sold some prints for a period of time, doesn’t seem important. The
loose prints were sold individually or as complete sets, and eventually
were distributed around the Country to be bought and resold. I have
documentation of the purchase of a complete (unbound) Bien Edition set
by the Stockton County Public Library, Stockton, CA, from the San
Francisco firm of H.H. Moore, in 1891, for the sum of $125.00. This set,
which the Library still owns, could easily have been one of the
remaining sets sold after the Audubon bankruptcy. Yet, it is in very
good condition today, with excellent coloring, minimal color
registration problems, and only a few sheets showing slight marginal
tears. The speculation about a Bien reissue centers on
a fairly significant number of Bien prints, of noticeably inferior
quality, in the marketplace. These prints are described as having very
poor or off coloring, and poor color registration. I have heard nothing
of any differences in printed nomenclature or credits, or differences in
paper, that would distinguish the suspected reissues from original Bien
prints. Numerous dealers have encountered Bien prints with missing
credits, but the general quality of coloring and color registration was
no different than prints found in the market with full credits. I
suspect that the prints found without full credits were either early
full color proofs or initial black ink proofs that were later
chromolithographed. I have recently had the opportunity to thoroughly
examine an original bound Bien volume. I have also examined a half sheet
Bien print that I assume would, from its condition, qualify as a
suspected reissue print. A fellow collector bought a Bien Part 6-7,
Plate 48, Barn Swallow for $100 from a Chicago area dealer, with the
idea of having it re-colored. The print would be described as poor
condition, and really looked dreadful. The quality of Bien prints does vary from print
to print in the areas of color registration, and accuracy or quality of
coloring. Generally, most Bien prints are of very good quality, but do
not equal the printing and hand coloring quality of a Havell print.
However, as to color registration problems on the above Barn Swallow
print, I found that it was no worse than what I noted on a few prints in
the original Bien volume that I examined. Also in the original Bien
volume I examined, I noted some prints where the colors seemed off or
not just right. They appeared either too dull or too garish or simply
uncomplimentary to the print as a whole. I’ve recently talked to several dealers who
specialize more in 19th Century chromolithographs, rather than Audubon
prints, and they believe that exposure to light over time can not only
fade the colors of a chromolithograph, but actually change the colors of
the original inks used to produce the antique chromolithographs. While it is still possible that there was an
attempt at, or an actual small Bien Edition reissue, based on the above
information, I believe that there was no Bien reissue. I suspect,
without any definitive proof, that as the Bien Edition prints were
distributed, the best quality prints were issued to favored or special
customers. My only reason or suspicion for this is that the original
Bien Edition volume owned by the Stark Museum of Art in Orange, Texas,
is described as being flawless and in excellent condition, without color
registration or color quality problems. The Bien Edition volume owned by
the Stark Museum is the original volume owned by John Bachman. If anyone
were to receive a “perfect” Bien Edition, it would have been John
Bachman. I, therefore, believe that the supposed Bien reissue prints are
either/or original Bien Edition prints that did not measure up in
quality and were never issued, but were not destroyed and became part of
the bankruptcy proceeds, or were original Bien Edition prints, that have
been loose and not been in bound volumes for many years, and were
exposed to light so that the color quality has changed or degraded to
their present condition as they are available in the marketplace.
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