Elegant framed print of a leopard, perfect for home decor. We have artwork from around the world. This piece came from an estate from South Africa and has been hanging in our home for decades. The frame is 32 1/2 by 28 inches. The frame has a special covering protecting the art from the sun. I have no paperwork on this piece. We will give our Facebook friends and group members the first shot at this, then it will go on the internet. It's called Der Panther, which is German for The Panther. We think it's a Lithograph. Whoever framed it spent a lot of money doing so. We are asking 775.00 for it. cash Karl Joseph Brodtmann was a Swiss 19th-century artist who was born in 1787. Karl Joseph Brodtmann's work has been offered at auction multiple times, with realized prices ranging from 34 USD to 6,233 USD, depending on the size and medium of the artwork. Since 2010, the record price for this artist at auction is 6,233 USD for African and Asian Animals, sold at Christie's South Kensington in 2013. The artist died in 1862. Brodtmann was brilliant at portraying animals with beauty, liveliness, and scientific accuracy. Karl Joseph/Ioseph Brodtmann (3 February 1787 – 14 May 1862) was a Swiss artist and lithographer, as well as a printmaker, publisher, and bookseller. He worked in Zürich and Schaffhausen. Brodtmann's natural history lithographs include Heinrich Rudolf Schinz's works on reptiles and birds, published in the early 1830s. Brodtmann also produced natural history lithographs, as Naturhistorische Bilder Gallerie aus dem Thierreiche. [1] Brodtmann was born in Überlingen. He produced his lithographs in the post-Linnaean "'Age of Enlightenment". Natural history specimens were depicted in hand-coloured sets for the use of biologists and the aristocracy, the latter being not only great patrons of the arts and sciences, but including many who were actively interested in fauna and flora. The artists respected scientific accuracy and often displayed a remarkable sense of