Saverio Manetti (1723–1784), Italian, A physician and naturalist by training, this Florentine polymath also left a mark on 18th-century botanical illustration with meticulous, vibrant works bridging science and art. Best known for his contributions to *Dell'Historia Naturale degli Uccelli* (1767–1776), a five-volume ornithological masterpiece commissioned by Grand Duke Pietro Leopoldo, his plates combined anatomical precision with a keen eye for composition—feathers rendered in almost tactile detail, perched against soft washes of landscape. Unlike contemporaries who idealized specimens, his approach favored ecological authenticity, often depicting birds mid-motion or interacting with their habitats. The project, among the most ambitious of its era, drew from both Mediterranean species and exotic imports, reflecting Enlightenment Europe’s growing fascination with global biodiversity. Though overshadowed by later scientific illustrators, his work subtly influenced Romantic-era nature studies through its balance of rigor and vitality. Beyond ornithology, he contributed to medical texts and local Tuscan flora studies, his cross-disciplinary curiosity emblematic of an age when art and science were still in lively conversation. Surviving sketches reveal a draftsman who could capture the curve of a beak or the droop of a willow branch with equal fluency.