Showing posts with label arthropods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arthropods. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 April 2016

Crawling with Life: An exhibition of flora and fauna at the Fitzwilliam Museum


The first thing you see when you enter the small exhibition of 17th and 18th-century flower drawings, is a giant black beetle with three impressive-looking horns.

 The beetle sits in a typical old-fashioned flora and fauna display case; it's pinned to a board in the classic way of a scientific specimen.

In fact, this beetle, alongside another beetle and a butterfly, have been borrowed from the Zoology Museum in Cambridge and placed next to watercolour images of themselves.  It is as if we have the portrait and the sitter all in the same glass vitrine.

Atlas beetle (Zoology Museum, Cambridge) and Follower of Merian, Atlas Beetle, c.1700, watercolour with some white and gold
The watercolours are by an anonymous artist from around 1700; they are beautifully detailed and strangely evocative.  The atlas beetle casts a shadow onto its pristine white background.  Is it crawling across a sheet of paper?  Its legs are exquisitely fragile.  The beetle appears to be moving diagonally upwards, from left to right.  Although it's 2-D paint, it seems more alive than the dead husk next to it.

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The curatorial decision to include some real biological specimens is genius.  Seeing them transports you back into the world of early modern science, the world before photography and X-rays, the world when artists were scientists and where the only pictures we had of flowers and insects were the pictures painted, etched and drawn by people.

Is it art?  Is it science?  These distinctions blur in your mind as you peer at the displays.


Jan van Kessel, detail from Butterflies and Other Insects, 1661, oil on copper

This Flemish artist, Jan van Kessel, got so carried away by the ecstasy of meticulous naturalism that he included transparent drops of water alongside his blossoms, shells and creepy crawlies.  Look at the drops practically quivering on the leaves and on the pale blue-grey ground.


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Another nice thing about the exhibition is the presence of two women painters.  In the world of botanical and zoological art, women were leading.  Indeed, practically the inventor of the entire genre was the Frankfurt-born Maria Sibylla Merian whose strangely hypnotic renderings of creatures and plants became the benchmark for all who followed.

Look at her weird depiction of snails and a beetle cavorting under a fleshy plant, all in front of the ubiquitous white background.  Merian did a cut-away to show a snail laying eggs.  Centuries later, nature photographers and David Attenborough's camera team are still vying to capture similar intimacies.


Maria Sibylla Merian, detail from Hyporicum baxiforum, with several snails and a beetle, 1695, watercolour

 The white background is not entirely ubiquitous, though.  Here is another woman, Margaretha Barbara Dietzsch, who, along with her brother, liked to use a black ground. 


Margaretha Barbara Dietzsch, detail from Common Dandelion with a Garden Tiger Moth, watercolour, bodycolour and gum Arabic, 18th C.

A strange nocturnal world unfolds.  It's almost a still life, almost a flower painting (like those in Gallery 17; see my blog post), but without the allegory, without the wilting leaves and the mementi mori.  Yes, a quarter of the dandelion clock is blown away but the caterpillar climbs determinedly on.  And everything is ripe with growth and bursting with life.  These are not melancholy pictures.  This is part science, part art, and 100% rhopography:  the depiction of the trivial, the love of the humble.




Visit the exhibition Crawling with Life: Flower Drawings from the Henry Rogers Broughton Bequest.

Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, Gallery 14.
Ends Sun, 8 May 2016.

It is totally worth seeing!  It's small, too, so you won't exhaust yourself. And free!

Related blog posts:





Permalink: http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2016/03/crawling-with-life-at-fitzwilliam-museum.html

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

Cambridge critters: Artificial arthropods

Cambridge creepy-crawlies

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Three Dung Beetles, by Wendy Taylor (2000).  Bronze.  New Hall Art Collection.

When I first posted pictures of Wendy Taylor's fabulous Dung Beetles, I had two enthusiastic responses from my yoga class.  So I was inspired to find more creepy-crawlies in Cambridge:  insects, arthropods, all manner of scuttling, segmented and armoured invertebrates.

Enjoy them!


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Grasshopper, by Matthew Lane Sanderson (2006).  Steel.  The Greshams, Gonville Place (facing Parker's Piece).
Glorious grasshopper.


Locust.  Egyptian (c. 660-330 BC).  Ancient Egyptian.  Photo © Fitzwilliam Museum.

Tiny but ancient locust.


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Print of a spider by Helene Fesenmaier.   From the exhibition at Trinity Hall in Nov. 2012.

Filigree spider.


bee Amanda Lebus, Mapping the Waters 2003 pencil on paper New Hall
Bee detail, from Mapping the Waters by Amanda Lebus (2003).  Pencil on paper.  New Hall Art Collection.

I love bees and am so sad that they're so rarely seen now.


Sisyrinchium with a Purple and Brown Butterfly by Maria Sibylla Merian (lived 1647-1717).  Watercolour on vellum.  © Fitzwilliam Museum.

A butterfly in profile (looking quite jaunty in what looks like a dress at a wedding).  And another purple one swooping down.  Don't you love the Latin name of that plant?


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Embroidered moth, detail from a North Chinese wedding dress (jacket, skirt and hairband).  Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
How gorgeous.


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Detail of a page in John James Audubon's volume Birds of America  (1827-1838).  Cambridge University Library.
Sorry about the blurry image but I just couldn't resist to give you another peek at Audubon's magnificent illustrations.


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Beehive (1899).  Relief plaque from the old Co-op 'Stop-and-Shop' store, now Primark.  Burleigh Street.

Not so much an insect as an insect's home.  The beehive has been a symbol of the Co-operative movement since the 1860s and can be found on quite a few Co-ops around the country.  The Beehive Shopping Centre in Cambridge is so-named because there used to be a big Co-op on that site.  Read more about Co-operative symbolism at the Public Monuments & Sculpture Association.


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The Cobwebs.  House at 4 Gresham Road.
Another home without its inhabitants.  Where have all the arachnids gone?  (This one comes to you courtesy of my son who remembers it from his days at kindie round the corner.)

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Lobsters in a corridor of the Fenners Building, part of Hughes Hall.  Seen from outside the carpark gates in Mortimer Rd.
Who made these mysterious crustaceans?  I know nothing about them but if you have any information, let me know!


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Grasshopper (or Chronophage) by Matthew Lane Sanderson, on top of the Corpus Clock (2008).  Gold-plated stainless steel.  Corpus Christi College, Corner Bene't St and King's Pde.

Of course, no Cambridge critter gallery is complete without the fanged chronophage, beloved of tourists and toddlers both.

This post is for Sally and Jane.  ;-)


Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2013/04/cambridge-creepy-crawlies-three-dung.html

Wednesday, 14 November 2012

Dung beetles at New Hall


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There they are, at the bottom of a spiral staircase:  three dung beetles.

They are large and dark and arranged in a triangular pattern.  They have antennae and six spindly, spiny legs.  Their folded wings are a striped carapace.  The rest of their armour is pebbled with a seed-grain texture that contrasts with their smooth faces.  (Can you call them faces?)

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They are a group of sculptures (much like the Chapman brothers' dinosaurs at Jesus College).  They are not on a plinth.

And what are they confabulating about??

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They seem a bit menacing, half abstract design, half sinister creepy-crawly.  They are much larger than any beetle has the right to be.

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But they are also fun, lurking in the basement, and not everybody finds them creepy.  Ruth Allwood is the catering manager at Murray Edwards College where the beetles live, and she says:
"My favourite pieces of artwork are the bronze beetles at the bottom of the Dome staircase. [...] I always pat one of them as I go past." (Read the rest at the New Hall website.)

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Wendy Taylor made the bronze beetles in 2000 and donated them to the New Hall Art Collection.  This was not the first time Taylor sculpted dung beetles. Here are some she did for London Zoo:


Dung Beetles, 1999, London Zoo
Source: Discovering London blog.

Another of her beetles was stolen in 2005/06 along with 20 other bronzes around London.

Cambridge has one other sculpture by Taylor; this one doesn't look like a beetle at all:


Jester, 1994, Emmanuel College, Cambridge
Source: Reggie's photo blog


Title: Three Dung Beetles
Artist: Wendy Taylor
Date: 2000
What: Bronze sculpture

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Permalink: http://artincambridge.blogspot.co.uk/2012/11/dung-beetles-at-new-hall.html


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