images from Strange Science by various aritists http://www.strangescience.net/index.htm
ps - if the pictures look strange, then click on them. I don't know why it's doing that.
art vs. science
advertised as a mermaid and let me add this taxidermied something or other:
mandrakes
human monstrosities - first feared then revered.
neat: "German zoologist Ernst Haeckel claimed that "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny," or that an animal's embryological development repeats the stages of its ancestral evolution. This picture comparing embryos was intended to support that view. "
apparently this was based on an elephant. Early Modern stuff is awesome.
Mask made of bamboo root from the Tamang people of Nepal
They are kind of like an obscure and evil I-Spy book, with lots of hidden actions and creatures. Also, this website it absolutely crazy (the whole point of the original curiosity cabinets anyway - disorientation --> association).
"Mythological Dioramas. Zymoglyphic art contains the concepts of: myths; the earth; the illustration of a cycle of birth, living, aging, death, and rebirth; and themes of creative fermentation in the primordial ooze."
http://www.zymoglyphic.org/dioramas.html
Hydrocephalic child whose head has opened like a flower (photo by Rosamond Purcell)
"He floods these 100-gallon tanks with colored lights as he pours colored inks over the models submerged in water. The resulting photographic images are rich in color with areas of sharp contrast and areas of abstract forms. Each photograph is a unique moment in time mirroring nature by having a particular light, a distinct color."
"Marine snails of the genus Xenophora collect shells, rocks, and other debris from their environment. They attach these objects to their shells at intervals during the shell's growth. Sometimes it creates a neat radiating pattern; sometimes the effect is more that of a jumble of debris. The result for us in any case is that their collections become little samplings of a variety of faraway underwater realms."
F. Ruysch developed new embalming techniques that revolutionized anatomical studies and practices, and also blurred the distinctions between art, science, and morality. Many of the works still exist today.
child's arm holding an eye socket
examples of preserved items in his wunderkammern/kunstkammern
the skeleton on the right clutches a piece of lung tissue. The inscription reads something like: "why did I waste my life on worldly goods?" (vanitas)
an etching done after a real diorama made by Ruysch out of infant's skeletons, injected blood vessels, and gallstones. More vanitas motifs.
lovely child's arm - vanitas
sick midwife toad - note the scattered babies(click image to enlarge)