Showing posts with label entomology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label entomology. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

19th Century Papier-Mâché Anatomical Bee and Beetle Models














These wonderful papier-mâché anatomical models of bees were made around 1875 by Dr. Louis Thomas Jerôme Auzoux (1797-1880). As a medical student in France in the early nineteenth-century, Auzoux was frustrated by the lack of real cadavers and the expense and delicacy of wax models to study anatomy. After his graduation from medical school in 1818, the entrepreneurial young doctor began experimenting with the creation of anatomical models, inspired by a visit to the papier-mâché workshop of Jean Francois Ameline in 1820. Taking his cue from puppet and doll-making techniques of the day, Auzoux developed his signature “Anatomie Clastique” approach: anatomical models made of a hardened paper paste, whose parts could be easily taken apart and reassembled.
By 1825, the demand for Auzoux’s models had grown so much that heopened a small factory in Saint Aubin d’Ecrosville, which employed 100 workers by 1828. (Check out this great feature from the Zoology Museum at the University of Aberdeen for some wonderful images of the factory, molds and tools Auzoux used to create his models). Over the next century, Auzoux and his factory produced over 600 zoological and botanical models, including a range depicting human bodies and foetuses, but I think his over-sized bee and beetle models are particularly charming. They are also astonishing in their detail: this model of a May beetle (made around 1850), for example, has hundreds of labelled anatomical details, and numbers to show the order in which its parts should be ‘dissected’. Although I know that these models were intended as educational tools, I think that they are also so delightfully playful: you can really see the influence of toy-making in Auzoux’s design approach.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Portraits of Extraordinary Beauty : Portraits of Moths



'Moth Man' Warren Krupsaw, takes photos small things most of us don't see, portraits of moths
His photos bring the beauty of these small creatures to us allowing us to see extraordinary detailed images of their features, wings, and antennae. No matter if you don't like insects, these photos allow you to see the beauty that is there in front of us but is missed everyday.
Krupshaw says“They take a while to get used to you - when I first go out they don’t tend to ’play’ straight away but after a while they get more confident.



He has photographed 100 different species of this insect



Click here to see more of this beauty.










Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Zana Briski: Reverence: The Migrating Insect Museum

Zana Briski's Reverence for Insects
Opens in New York December 21, 2012



The world of insects can provoke fear or curiosity in humans. Zana Briski hopes it is the latter. She wants us to look at this project as a way of confronting our fears and those things that appear different from us.

Zana Briski is an award winning photographer and filmmaker who is best known as the director of Born into Brothels, the 2004 winner of the Academy Award for Documentary Feature. For her film, she photographed the harshness of life for those born into the brothels of India. In 2002, Zana founded Kids with Cameras and she published a book of the children’s photographs, Kids with Cameras. Her self-published book, is a collector’s edition of her own photographs, Brothel.

Briski's first love is animals and the natural world. So for this project she turns her camera to an entirely different subject, those who live in the entomological world, those of the praying mantis. Her new project is called Reverence, named for the state in which she photographs and for that she wants to communicate through her work. Zana collaborates with living insects in the wild, taking their portraits in photographs and film. She makes the statement, “when I have eye contact with an insect, I am in a state of awe and wonder. It is this want to transmit through my images." The project was mostly self-funded and she used Kickstarter that enabled her to raise funds to hire the architect to build the Reverence structure.



In this project she brings the exquisite world of the insect, music, and film together in a migratory museum. This temporary structure is inspired by the exquisite shape of praying mantis ootheca, or eggpod. This travelling museum will explore the human insect relationship in the world. It opens on December 21, 2012, in New York. This exhibit is housed in a 10,000 square foot structure that was designed by Japanese architect Shigeru Ban. After its opening in NY this project will travel to parks around the world. Briski will also work with a master printmaker to develop unique large-scale photographs on handmade Japanese papers.




Briski sees a world that society often fears, that which it does not understand. Briski's primary interest is to bring our relationship with nature and Earth to the forefront. She wants us to rethink how we as humans look at other creatures by bringing them face to face with us. For Briski, insects just don't exist as scientific specimens but they exist as attentive, knowing, and curious beings. She also goes on to say, the emphasis will not be on a scientific or an analytical perspective, but an emotional and spiritual one. Any funds raised from ticket sales, book, movie and print sales will go back to support environmental organizations and organizations which support native peoples, such as the San of the Kalahari."





Click below to watch her video.








A few of the many books at the Central Library about the world of insects





























DVDs and Blu-Ray

Disc 3 includes Insects