Showing posts with label drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drawing. 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:





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Tuesday, 4 June 2013

Three drawings at the Drawing Cube


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The Drawing Cube, 9 Norfolk St, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, CB1 2LD, next to CB2.

There's a new little gallery in town, and it's called The Drawing Cube.  See how friendly and cosy it is!


Three pictures

I ambled on in and here are my three favourites from the current exhibition.


Esberger, TRudi 3work from the series Arrival 2012 gouache and pencil, signed digital print


Trudi Esberger, work from the series Arrival, 2012, gouache and pencil, signed digital print

I love the mysterious atmosphere, the crisp clean lines, the long shadow, the transparent figures in front of the low wall, the BLUE.  I'm reminded of Edward Hopper and the covers of hard-boiled detective novels. 



Palmer, Becky No doubt 2013 wcol and acrylic on paper

Becky Palmer, No Doubt, 2013, watercolour and acrylic on paper

I love images of arthropods (as you may know) so these kooky bugs appealed to me particularly!  There's a whole series of beetles and butterflies but this leaping creature, hovering above its shadow and striving upwards to where another elusive beastie disappears, cropped by the edge, says it all.  Lovely spare lines and colour accents, and a great sense of motion.


Young, Joanne The journey homw 2013 graphite on paper

Joanne Young, The Journey Home, 2013, graphite on paper

I'm including this because it reminds us all that you don't need a whole lot of complicated equipment to make fantastic art.  All of this is made with just a pencil and a piece of paper.  The varieties of greys, of texture and of line, and the different kinds of light (and even colour) which they evoke, are amazing.


Three artists

All the artists are graduates from the world-famous MA in Children's Book Illustration at the Cambridge School of Art (part of Anglia Ruskin University).


One affordable comic book

While I was in the gallery, I picked up this wonderful comic book, financed by crowdfunding, and full of quirky graphic short stories by the exhibited artists and many more.




Buy it for £3.50 from the Drawing Cube.  Or buy it online via the Etsy shop.

These books make excellent gifts from Cambridge (for those of us tired of yet another pot of local honey or teabags with a picture of King's College on the packet...)


Find out more:


To find out more about each artist:  Click on their name above.
To find out more about this and other upcoming exhibitions at the Drawing Cube, click here: The Drawing Cube

The exhibition ends Sunday 9 June.



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