Maria Merian (1647-1717)

Maria Merian distinguished herself with paintings and prints of insects and botanical subjects drawn from life. Inspired by a curiosity about insects from an early age, she was the first to study metamorphosis extensively. She is especially noted for her work on New World butterflies, done during a two-year journey to Surinam, then a Dutch colony. Note how she portrayed several stages of the butterfly's life cycle and its association with a particular host plant. Her work has also appeared on a pair of US stamps (below). 6 plants, 9 butterflies and 2 beetles are named after her. [ Return to HSci 1814 ]

  • See her botanical prints. More.
  • portfolio [Nat. Mus. of Women in the Arts]
  • Featured on the former 500 Deutschmark note
  • more biography
  • Books at UMn: Maria Sibylla Merian: Artist & Naturalist (Andersen Horticultural); Women on the margins : three seventeenth-century lives (Wilson)

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