previous |
|
by Angela Lorenz
|
||
|
Edition of 10 copies
|
11.3"x11.3"; 26"x11.3"x24"
displayed upright
|
Bologna, Italy, 2000
|
|
This work was inspired by the remnants of the most famous and extensive collection of artifacts, mostly natural, in 16th c. Europe. They were amassed by Ulisse Aldrovandi (1522-1605), the first professor of natural history ever appointed in Italy, at the University of Bologna. A tiny fraction of Aldrovandi's 18,000 items are still on display in today's Aldrovandi Museum at the University of Bologna, but a few of the strangest pieces caused the artist to investigate the collection. Oddities, such as a frog with a lizard's tail plastered on and fishes' teeth inserted into the frog's mouth, led to research that included not just Aldrovandi and his thousands of tempera paintings but the History of Museums in general. What was originally going to be a work about the fakes created for museums and natural history collections gave way to the broader topic of museology from Hellenistic Greece to the Enlightenment. The series of ten books,contains color slides or transparencies of nine watercolors based on subjects commissioned either by Aldrovandi or by Manfredo Settala (1600-1680) for their collections of curiosities. Settala's museum was in Milan, but his manuscripts are housed today in the Biblioteca Estense of Modena, not far from Bologna. The research, both iconographic and textual, was boiled down to a 900-word rhyming poem that accompanies the color slides. These are hidden from view, however, when the book is placed upright and its double concertina fold extended outward. In this position, only the 11 copper-plate etchings are visible, as a wunderkammer or theater of nature, receding into the distance. The etchings, hand-drawn by the artist, are based on the earliest images of museums in Europe. They recreate prints commissioned by founders of collections of curiosities to represent the museums visually at the front of a published catalog. An attempt was made to include the animal, vegetable and mineral world in the first version of the book(item no.47 below), but in the Magic Lantern Edition, there is no purple mica in the front cover. However, the animal world is still represented with the vellum binding. The vegetable world is more subtle. The etching paper is composed of cotton rag; however, it was dyed in boiling calendula flowers before the etchings were printed. In this way, not just a plant is represented but one with medicinal value, known as a "simple". While the cover lacks purple mica, it is significant for other reasons. It evokes the "magic lantern", a proto-slide projector which the Jesuit Athanasius Kircher experimented with at the Roman College in 17th c Rome. The color images illustrating the poem are transparencies glued into the pages by hand instead of the unique watercolors of the first version. These two features connect the Magic Lantern Edition more to the history of photography and cinematography, initiated in these early museums, which were part library and part laboratory as well as collections of curiosities. Text printed without electricity using moveable type in Centaur (a mythical beast) at Stamperia Valdonega of Verona on acid-free paper produced by Cartiere Fedrigoni. Etchings printed with the help of Manuela Candini at the Laboratorio di Sperimentazioni Grafiche Leoni-Whitman, in Bologna, a stone's throw from Aldrovandi's Collection. Assistance with calendula dyeing, printing and mica cutting provided by Kate Erb. For Lucy R. Sprague |
||