The Theatre of Anatomy
Interesting to bring this juxtaposition of the past into the present.
Looking at the work of anatomist Frederick Ruysch [1638 - 1731]
Ruysch is renowned for his extraordinary tableaux, or dioramas, which
incorporated skeletons and bio-botanical backdrops.
These were arranged/presented with the themes of vanitas, transience and mutability in mind.
The still life genre originated in the Netherlands and the vanitas still life,
with it's emphasis on the all too swift passage of time and the impermanence of the human condition
was symbolised through the use of skulls and flowers; an
allegory of death and mutability.
Observation serves imagination.
Interesting to bring this juxtaposition of the past into the present.
Looking at the work of anatomist Frederick Ruysch [1638 - 1731]
Ruysch is renowned for his extraordinary tableaux, or dioramas, which
incorporated skeletons and bio-botanical backdrops.
These were arranged/presented with the themes of vanitas, transience and mutability in mind.
The still life genre originated in the Netherlands and the vanitas still life,
with it's emphasis on the all too swift passage of time and the impermanence of the human condition
was symbolised through the use of skulls and flowers; an
allegory of death and mutability.
Observation serves imagination.