Centenary of J.J. Audubon, 1985
John James Audubon (1785-1851) is a legend, revered bird watchers and art enthusiasts alike as America's preeminent naturalist and bird artist his instantly recognizable prints adorn many homes and offices throughout the nation. Given his talent and popularity, it's difficult to appreciate the struggle he endured to bring his ornithological images to the public. Audubon was born in the French colony of Santo Domingo (now Haiti), the son of Captain Jean Audubon, a French sailor and adventurer, and one of his mistresses, Jeanne Rabine, a French chambermaid, who died six months later. Beginning at the age of three he was raised by his father and an indulgent stepmother in Nantes, an industrial city on the Loire River in western France. Young Audubon acquired the graces of a country gentleman, received a bit of naval training, learned to love nature and wildlife, and began to draw.
http://www.haleysteele.com/hs_root/jjaudubon/life/bio.cfm
Date of issue: 1 October 1985
Expiration date:
Design: John
James Audubon & André Buzin
Printing: I.P.M.
s.a (Imprimerie du Marais, s.a., Brussels)
Perforation: 13
Size: 48 x 30 mm
Sheet: 20 (4 x 5)
Marginal inscriptions: “ZAIRE” on top and bottom, 6 blue vertical
lines all around
Circulation: 312,500
No 1282. 5z, “Grande aigrette” Great Egret (Ardea alba)
No 1283. 10z,
“Macreuse à bec jeune” (Melanitta (nigra) Americana)
No 1284. 15z, “Héron bihoreau” (Nycticorax nycticorax)
No 1285. 25z,
“Macreuse à front blanc” (Melanitta perspicillata)
The series:
%20J.J.%20Audubon_bestanden/image002.jpg)
%20J.J.%20Audubon_bestanden/image004.jpg)
The imperforated series is in size and coloring exact the same as above:
Remark: the white border around these stamps is much larger when cut from a side, top, bottom or corner of a sheet.
%20J.J.%20Audubon_bestanden/image006.jpg)
Not issued:
No 1283. 50z instead of 10z Imperforated
%20J.J.%20Audubon_bestanden/image010.jpg)
There are no variations or curiosities known for any of the above shown material.