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Amanda Almira Newton - Prunus persica: Southern Early

Prunus persica: Southern Early (1911)

Amanda Almira Newton (American, 1860-1943)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
The Artist died in 1943 so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries where the copyright term is the Artist's life plus 70 years or fewer. It is in the public domain in the United States because it was published or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office before Jan 1, 1926
Amanda Almira Newton

Amanda Almira Newton was a botanical illustrator for the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) who specialized in watercolors of fruit. Her work is now preserved in the USDA's Pomological Watercolor Collection, and she is the second-most prolific contributor to that archive of 7600 paintings, with her work representing roughly one-sixth of the total.

Amanda Almira Newton was born around 1860. She was the granddaughter of Isaac Newton, the first commissioner of the USDA, who died when she was a child; later in life, her colleague at the USDA, Royal Charles Steadman, would paint a portrait of her grandfather for her.

Newton worked for the USDA from 1896 to 1928. This was a time when the major fruit-producing regions in the United States were just beginning to emerge, as farmers worked with the USDA to establish orchards for expanding markets. Photography was not yet in widespread use as a documentary medium, so the government relied on artists like Newton to produce technically accurate drawings for its publications. Newton was one of more than 50 skilled botanical illustrators hired in this early period—among whom were Elsie Lower, Ellen Isham Schutt, Royal Charles Steadman, and Deborah Griscom Passmore—and she was one of the most productive, turning out more than 1200 finished watercolors for the USDA.

Newton's artwork for the USDA covered a wide range of fruit and nuts, principally apples, of which there are many hundreds of examples. There are also paintings of strawberries, plums, citrus, persimmons, avocados, and cherries, as well as fruits that are still not commonly grown in the continental United States such as loquat and baobab. Most of her watercolors show a whole and a half fruit in full color; a few (such as the strawberry and cherry paintings) show foliage as well. Her style is precise and detailed, combining vigorous lines with subtle color modulations. Newton signed her work 'A.A. Newton'.

In addition, beginning in 1896, Newton made wax models of some 300 specimens of fruits being grown or tested in the United States. She inaugurated production of these wax models for the USDA and later showed some of them at the Tennessee Centennial Exposition and the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition. For the latter exposition, she created some models showing how environmental conditions, cultivation practices, and storage conditions affect the fruit's condition and keeping qualities.

Newton's original paintings are now in the USDA National Agricultural Library's Pomological Watercolor Collection.

In Collection: USDA Pomological Watercolors (View all 1130)

Mangifera indica: Peters No

Mangifera indica: Peters No (1909)

Amanda Almira Newton (American, 1860-1943)
Malus domestica: White Pippin

Malus domestica: White Pippin (1910)

Deborah Griscom Passmore (American, 1840–1911)
Fragaria: Saunders

Fragaria: Saunders (1912)

Amanda Almira Newton (American, 1860-1943)
Musa: Yenjerto

Musa: Yenjerto (1904)

Ellen Isham Schutt (American, 1873 – 1955)
Rubus: Early King

Rubus: Early King (1916)

Royal Charles Steadman (American, 1875 – 1964)
Fragaria: La Follette

Fragaria: La Follette (1915)

Amanda Almira Newton (American, 1860-1943)
Prunus domestica: Thanksgiving Prune

Prunus domestica: Thanksgiving Prune (1903)

Deborah Griscom Passmore (American, 1840–1911)
Acca sellowiana

Acca sellowiana (1909)

Amanda Almira Newton (American, 1860-1943)
Citrus grandis: Alamoen

Citrus grandis: Alamoen (1914)

Amanda Almira Newton (American, 1860-1943)
Cecropia palmata

Cecropia palmata (1918)

Deborah Griscom Passmore (American, 1840–1911)
Malus domestica: Bloomless

Malus domestica: Bloomless (1893)

Deborah Griscom Passmore (American, 1840–1911)
Citrus limon

Citrus limon (1911)

Ellen Isham Schutt (American, 1873 – 1955)
Malus domestica: Missouri Pippin

Malus domestica: Missouri Pippin (1910)

Ellen Isham Schutt (American, 1873 – 1955)
Citrus nobilis: King

Citrus nobilis: King (1911)

Elsie E. Lower (American, 1882-1971)
Pyrus communis: Kieffer Most Green

Pyrus communis: Kieffer Most Green (1901)

Bertha Heiges (American, 1866-1956)
View all 1130 Artworks

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