Anne Henslow Barnard

Botanical artist and scientific illustrator
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBotanical artist and scientific illustrator
PlacesUnited Kingdom
wasIllustrator Botanical illustrator Scientific illustrator Artist
Work fieldArts Creativity Journalism Science
Gender
Female
Birth1833
Death1899 (aged 66 years)
Family
Father:John Stevens Henslow
The details

Biography

Anne Henslow Barnard (1833–1899) was a 19th-century botanical artist.

Biography

Anne Henslow was born in 1833. She was the youngest daughter of botanist and Cambridge University professor John Stevens Henslow and Harriet Jenyns, who was the daughter of clergyman George Leonard Jenyns and the sister of naturalist Leonard Jenyns. Her older sister Frances Harriet married botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker, and one of her brothers, George, became a professor of botany.

In 1859 she married army officer Robert Cary Barnard, who was the son of an old friend of her father's. They had eight children.

Barnard's father was one of the first Cambridge University professors to give illustrated lectures, for which he used poster-size illustrations. Some of these were based on rough sketches by Barnard that were then finished by the botanical artist Walter Hood Fitch.

She contributed plates to Curtis's Botanical Magazine in the years 1879–94. She also illustrated Daniel Oliver's 1864 Lessons in Elementary Biology, which was built on a manuscript left by her father. It stayed in print for several decades. Although her output was not large, she was considered a very fine botanical artist.

She died on 19 January 1899.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 14 Aug 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.