Monday, March 14, 2016
Video Short about our Current Exhibition House of Wax!
Above is a wonderful short video piece on The Morbid Anatomy Museum and our current exhibition House of Wax, which features German anatomical models once on view at a 19th and early 20th century popular museum. The short was made by the folks at the Hofstra University produced For Your Island and includes interviews with our creative director Joanna Ebenstein and several visitors to the exhibition.
You can see House of Wax--which was curated by Ryan Matthew Cohn--any day but Tuesday, 12-6 through May 30; You can find out more about the exhibition here. You can learn even more about the show at a lecture on April 5th by Dr. Peter M. McIsaac, German and Museum Studies at The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, who wrote the exhibition text; more on that can be found here.
Thursday, March 10, 2016
Anatomical Venus Book Release Party and Symposium Saturday June 4: SAVE THE DATE
On Saturday June 4, we hope you’ll join us at The Morbid Anatomy Museum to celebrate the release of The Anatomical Venus, a new Morbid Anatomy book coming out this May (by DAP in the US and Thames and Hudson
elsewhere) which explores the strange and fascinating history of seductive
female anatomical wax models which peaked in fashion in the 19th
century. Packed with over 250 images--many never before published images--from around the
world and documented in intricate detail, the book is the result of Morbid Anatomy founder Joanna Ebenstein's ten-year photographic quest.
The book's text explores the Anatomical Venus within her historical and cultural context in order to reveal the shifting attitudes toward death and the body that today render such spectacles strange. It reflects on connections between death and wax, the tradition of life-sized simulacra and preserved beautiful women, the phenomenon of women in glass boxes in fairground displays, and ideas of the ecstatic, the sublime and the uncanny.
To celebrate, we will host a symposium exploring the range of topics covered by The Anatomical Venus including (but certainly not limited to) anatomized women, wax, the ecstatic, agalmatophilia (people who fall in love with non-animate humans), Catholicism and the cult of the saints, the uncanny, and more.
The book's text explores the Anatomical Venus within her historical and cultural context in order to reveal the shifting attitudes toward death and the body that today render such spectacles strange. It reflects on connections between death and wax, the tradition of life-sized simulacra and preserved beautiful women, the phenomenon of women in glass boxes in fairground displays, and ideas of the ecstatic, the sublime and the uncanny.
To celebrate, we will host a symposium exploring the range of topics covered by The Anatomical Venus including (but certainly not limited to) anatomized women, wax, the ecstatic, agalmatophilia (people who fall in love with non-animate humans), Catholicism and the cult of the saints, the uncanny, and more.
Full lineup and details to come. You can sign up to attend the event on Facebook to be alerted to more information as it is released, or simply watch this space.
Image: Venerina (Little Venus), life-sized dissectible wax model created by the workshop of Clemente Susini at Florence’s La Specola for Museo di Palazzo Poggi, Bologna, Italy, 1782. Photo by Joanna Ebenstein
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
Remembering Willie Seabrook: Guest Post by Roger Luckhurst, author of "Zombies: A Cultural History"
On Tuesday, March 29th, Roger Luckhurst--professor at Birkbeck University and author of Zombies: A Cultural History--will be giving a talk for us entitled "The Strange Case of William Seabrook: Traveler, Pervert, Occultist, Drunk, and the man who brought the Zombie to America." Below is a guest post by Dr Luckhurst in which you will learn more about this fascinating man; you can find out more about the lecture--and buy tickets!--here. Hope very much to see you there!
Remembering Willie Seabrook
The extraordinary adventurer and travel writer William Seabrook managed to be a Greenwich Village bohemian in the 1910s, a Jazz Age primitivist who danced on the tables of Harlem and Paris clubs in the 1920s, and a wealthy Westchester celebrity by the late 1930s.
In between, Seabrook tramped through Europe as a bum for a year and was an early American volunteer in the Great War, invalided out as an ambulance driver by chlorine gas poisoning at Verdun. He travelled to exotic locales in Africa, Arabia and the Caribbean, and wrote famous books about each. He lived in Paris and on the French Rivera amongst Modernist exiles, next door to Thomas Mann and Aldous Huxley. Man Ray and Gertrude Stein talk about him in their autobiographies. He inspired the French Surrealists, Michel Leiris and Georges Bataille. He knew everyone.
And he has been largely forgotten by everyone since he died in 1945. He’s worth remembering, though, not just for his bizarre life, but for his enduring gift to American popular culture: the zombie.
Seabrook was notorious in his lifetime for his exotic features for the slick magazines, but also for his very public eccentricities. He was, for example, a sado-masochist with a habit for leading his hired ‘secretaries’ around in collar and chains at parties. In his autobiography, No Hiding Place (1942), he psychoanalysed his sexual ‘kinks’, his penchant for ‘putting chains on ladies’, without shame. To play out this fetishism, Seabrook even employed Man Ray to photograph Lee Miller in various masochistic positions. Seabrook’s perversities were examined by his exasperated second wife, the novelist Marjorie Worthington. Her funny memoir was called The Strange World of Willie Seabrook (1966).
He was a spectacular alcoholic who eventually locked himself away in a mental hospital to break the habit. His book about this experience, Asylum, was a best-seller, and has just been reissued by Dover Press.
Seabrook was also interested in the occult. In 1942, he published Witchcraft: Its Power in the World Today, which detailed his life-long obsession with collecting experiences of occult practice from around the world. This included a brief friendship with the Golden Dawn magus and self-declared Antichrist, Aleister Crowley, during Crowley’s time in Greenwich Village. In 1919, Crowley visited Seabrook for a week of ritual experiment at his farm, in which they decided to communicate solely by various inflections of the magic word ‘Wow’ (events retold in Seabrook’s story, unsurprisingly called ‘Wow’). On hearing of his suicide by overdose in 1945, Crowley wrote poisonously ‘the swine-dog W. B. Seabrook has killed himself at last, after months of agonized slavery to his final wife.’
Seabrook’s book on witchcraft was cast in the rhetoric of the sceptical researcher, but intrigued by the extent of belief in the modern Western world. London and its suburbs, he said ‘house more strange cults, secret societies, devil’s altars, professional “Sorcerers” and charlatans than any other metropolitan area on Earth.’ He repeated whispered stories of sympathetic magic and voodoo dolls at dinners in Paris and on the Riviera, and spoke of attending Black Masses in New York and London (‘rather a bore’).
Seabrook remained fascinated by this sub-culture, which presumably crossed over with his sexual predilections. Weirdly enough, he featured in a photo-story in Life magazine at the start of the Second World War when he hosted a magical ceremony to issue a hex on Adolf Hitler. I suppose it worked. Sort of.
But Seabrook was cynical about magic in the West exactly in proportion to his conviction that witchcraft still exercised power in ‘primitive’ societies. Indeed, his bohemianism frequently refused the niceties of civilisation and embraced ‘savage’ energies. In New York, he loved the Harlem clubs and was in Paris when a cult built around the black dancer Josephine Baker.
A longing for release from his white identity explains Seabrook’s escapes into exotic worlds. In 1924, he travelled to the Middle East and wrote Adventures in Arabia, about joining a Bedouin tribe. In 1931, he was commissioned by Paul Morand to travel to the French colonies in West Africa with the explicit aim of joining a ‘cannibal’ cult. It turned out that the French colonial administration was so obsessed with stopping the natives from this enacting this ritual that it was impossible to eat human flesh in Africa.
Seabrook returned to Paris with some recipes and bribed the Paris morgue for a limb from a recent corpse that he then cooked and ate. It’s a lovely inversion: the most primitive act is found not in the ‘savage’ periphery but the ‘civilised’ metropolitan centre
But Seabrook will endure in the corners of cultural memory for his other exotic adventure, to Haiti. In 1929, he published The Magic Island, an account of his journey, to an island then occupied by American forces. He pursued his typical interests: seeking initiation into the native rituals of the vodou religion, and claiming to drink blood sacrifices and feel the authentic power of the vodou gods passing through him. Yet it is in a later chapter that Seabrook encounters another local aspect of witchery.
In the chapter ‘…Dead Men Working in Cane Fields’, Seabrook writes up local stories about zombies. The local Creole word zombi had appeared in some American writings since the 1880s, but Seabrook took the credit for Americanizing this term and popularizing it.The zombie, they say, is a soulless human corpse, still dead, but taken from the grave and endowed by sorcery with a mechanical semblance of life – it is a dead body which is made to walk and move as if it were alive. People who have the power to do this go to a fresh grave, dig up the body before it has had time to rot, galvanize it into movement, and then make of it a servant or slave, occasionally for the commission of some crime, more often simply as a drudge around the habitation or the farm, setting it dull heavy tasks, and beating it like a dumb beast if it slackens.The chapter is at first an accumulation of local accounts, but Seabrook is astounded when his informant tells him that there are zombies at work nearby in the plantations of the Haitian-American Sugar Corporation. Seabrook therefore comes face to face with actual zombies, and with exquisite hesitation, remarks: ‘I did see these “walking dead men”, and I did, in a sense, believe in them and pitied them, indeed, from the bottom of my heart.’
Finding three ‘dead’ Haitians at work, he experiences a moment of ‘mental panic’, only to decide that these are ‘nothing but poor ordinary demented human beings, idiots, forced to toil in the fields.’
The context of slavery provides the framework for the ‘undead’ shuffling slave, declared ‘dead’ by the social contract, and forced to work. In the eighteenth century, the French colony of Saint Domingue, before it became independent Haiti in 1804, had the highest death rates but the largest profits amongst slaves taken from West Africa.
When Seabrook travelled to Haiti, the American occupiers were in the process of reinstating large-scale plantations and trying to stamp out native superstitions in the name of progress. No wonder the workers were locally called zombis.
Seabrook’s book was a direct influence on White Zombie, the 1932 film that smuggled the zombie into the major horror cycle that began that year. The focus is on Lugosi’s menacing figure of the witch-doctor rather than the zombies he commands, but it was the beginning of the cinematic career of a category of the undead that has since come to dominate contemporary horror film. The memory of Seabrook is now returning often very sketchily in pre-histories of zombie culture, but his focus on the Haitian zombie is best understood in the matrix of his obsession with witchcraft, the occult and the vital energies of so-called primitive societies around the world.
Image: Voodoo performers captured by Seabrook in The Magic Island, via Literary007
Friday, March 4, 2016
SPECIAL EVENT: Into the Panopticum: Spectacle and Education in Popular Museums of 19th Century Europe with Dr. Peter M. McIsaac, German and Museum Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
This April, we are beyond delighted to welcome Dr. Peter M. McIsaac, Associate Professor of German and Museum Studies at The University of Michigan, to Morbid Anatomy. McIssac wrote the introductory essay (read in this PDF) for our current House of Wax exhibition--on view through May 30 and curated by Ryan Matthew Cohn--which
showcases rarely seen anatomical and ethnographic waxes from Castan's
Berlin-based Panopticum which was open to the public from 1869-1922.
On April 5, McIssac will give an illustrated lecture on the history of panoptica, European museums popular from the 18th through the early 20th century that, like American Dime Museums, fall somewhere between aristocratic cabinets of curiosity and today's ideas of museums. Attendees will also be able to visit our current exhibition House of Wax at the end of the event.
On April 5, McIssac will give an illustrated lecture on the history of panoptica, European museums popular from the 18th through the early 20th century that, like American Dime Museums, fall somewhere between aristocratic cabinets of curiosity and today's ideas of museums. Attendees will also be able to visit our current exhibition House of Wax at the end of the event.
Full details below; tickets can be purchased here. Hope very much to see you there!
Into the Panopticum: Spectacle and Education in Popular Museums of 19th Century Europe with Dr. Peter M. McIsaac, Associate Professor of German and Museum Studies at The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Tuesday, April 5
Time: 7 pm
Admission: $8
Location: Morbid Anatomy Museum, 424 Third Avenue, 11215 Brooklyn NY
NOTE: *** Admission includes a visit to the Museum--currently displaying rare wax models from Castan's Panopticum in Berlin--after the talk.
Panoptica were popular throughout Europe from the 18th through the early 20th century. Like dime museums such as Barnums American Museum, these largely forgotten spaces fall somewhere between aristocratic cabinets of curiosity and todays ideas of museums. They would display for a popular audience anatomical and pathological waxworks, real human specimens, death masks of celebrities and murderers, ethnographic busts, Anatomical Venuses, waxes showing the effects of syphilis (still a fatal disease at this time) along with assorted curiosities such as elephant tusks, mummies, stuffed alligators, and monkey skeletons. They also presented live acts such as singers, dancers, ventriloquists, hunger artists, and even living freaks and ethnic rarities. Its spectacle hovered between the exotic and scientific pretense.
Tonight, join Dr. Peter M. McIsaac for an illustrated lecture about the rise and fall of the little known phenomenon of the panopticon in cultural context. The Museum--which is currently displaying rare wax models from Castan's Panopticum in Berlin, with explanatory texts written by Dr. Mc Isaac--will also be open after the talk.
Peter M. McIsaac is associate professor of German Studies and Museum Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His publications include Museums of the Mind: German Modernity and the Dynamics of Collecting and Exhibiting the German Past: Museums, Film, and Musealization. He is also currently writing a book-length manuscript on the "secret" German pre-history to Body Worlds, a contemporary exhibition of human corpses that has broken attendance records and generated controversy around the world. In 2005, he received the Richard K. Lublin Distinguished Teaching Award from Trinity College of Duke University. Before coming to Michigan, McIsaac served as the Director of the Canadian Centre for German and European Studies at York University.
Images, top to bottom:
- Im Panopticum, Albert Heise, 1892: A painting of a panopticum in Berlin, perhaps Castan's
- Installation shot of the Morbid Anatomy Museum current exhibition House of Wax
- The wax atelier of E. E. Hammer, Munich, late 19th century. Courtesy of Valentin-Karlstadt-Musäum, München
- Guidebook to Castan's Panopticum, 19th or early 20th century, sourced here
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
AutomataCon: A Convention for Automata Enthusiasts: The Morris Museum, Morristown, New Jersey, March 18-20, 2016
We at Morbid Anatomy are so excited about AutomataCon, an upcoming convention for makers, collectors and enthusiasts of Automata, moving mechanical toys popular in the 18th Century and 19th Centuries. AutomataCon will take place March 18-20, 2016 at The Morris Museum, who house one the finest collections of antique automata in the world.
The full schedule for the event follows; You can find out more--and get tickets--here. See previous posts on the Morris Museum here and here.
The full schedule for the event follows; You can find out more--and get tickets--here. See previous posts on the Morris Museum here and here.
AutomataConA Convention for Automata EnthusiastsMarch 18-20, 2016, Morris Museum, Morristown, New JerseyAutomataCon is a convention of and for artists, collectors, historians, and enthusiasts of automatons and related kinetic art. It is a two day event being held March 18th and 19th, 2016 at and in conjunction with the Morris Museum in Morristown, New Jersey, home of the Murtogh D. Guinness Collection of Mechanical Musical Instruments and Automata.The goal of the convention is to gather people from around the world to share ideas, build relationships, and grow interest in automata new and old. The convention will include a variety of private and public programming, such as social gatherings, museum tours, panel discussions, live demonstrations, workshops, presentations, and an exhibition.The idea for a convention stemmed from the fellowship shown on the Automata / Automaton Group and Mechanical Adventures group on Facebook. Like the Facebook groups, I feel that the true value of the convention will be the relationships built and knowledge shared when passionate people of common interest come together. As such, the success of the convention will depend on the attendees. It will be what we make of it. I am optimistic that great things will come.AutomataCon is a convention of and for artists, collectors, historians, and enthusiasts of automatons and related kinetic art. It is a two day event being held March 18th and 19th, 2016 at and in conjunction with the Morris Museum in Morristown, New Jersey, home of the Murtogh D. Guinness Collection of Mechanical Musical Instruments and Automata.The goal of the convention is to gather people from around the world to share ideas, build relationships, and grow interest in automata new and old. The convention will include a variety of private and public programming, such as social gatherings, museum tours, panel discussions, live demonstrations, workshops, presentations, and an exhibition.The idea for a convention stemmed from the fellowship shown on the Automata / Automaton Group and Mechanical Adventures group on Facebook. Like the Facebook groups, I feel that the true value of the convention will be the relationships built and knowledge shared when passionate people of common interest come together. As such, the success of the convention will depend on the attendees. It will be what we make of it. I am optimistic that great things will come.SCHEDULEFriday Night ReceptionMarch 18, 6-9 PM
Join us for a private reception at the Morris Museum consisting of light refreshments and hors d'oeuvres, with private and behind-the-scenes tours of the Murtogh D. Guinness Collection of Mechanical Musical Instruments and Automata.
Saturday ProgrammingMarch 19, 11 am - 5 PMSaturday programming will include a variety of panels and programming, covering topics such as
- The History of Automatons
- Techniques for Making Automatons
- Automaton Collecting
- Demonstrations and Meet-the-Artists
- Hands-On Workshops
- Table displays and sales (more info soon)
- Special programming in the Bickford Theater
More details will be posted as panelists are finalized. Please volunteer to participate when you register, as AutomataCon's success depends on its attendees!
Premier showing of historic film, "Le Monde des Automates"Saturday, March 19, Time TBDWe are pleased to announce that AutomataCon will host the premier showing of the extremely rare 1928 film, “Le Monde des Automates [the World of Automata],” in the museum’s Bickford Theatre, courtesy of Jere and Steve Ryder of AutaMusique, Ltd. This silent film was meant to accompany Alfred Chapuis’ & Eduard Gélis’ foundational 2 volume book by same name, and which has been effectively ‘lost’ from public view for 70+ years. Originally created as a typical period silent film using hand-driven cameras, an accompanying sound track was added shortly thereafter, making this one of the first Swiss-made sound films. About 25-30 minutes in length, it documents some extremely rare and unique automata and mechanical music, at a very early time. A fabulous historical document.
Image: Suicide of Cleopatra automaton from The Morris Museum, about 1880-1890Sunday ProgrammingMarch 20, 11 am - 2 PMSunday programming will include additional, less formal panels and programming. Demonstrations of the Guinness Collection are also given at 2 PM.
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Job Openings on Governor's Island: Director of External Relations and Vice President, OpenHouseGI
One of all time favorite cultural spaces in New York City--Governor's Island--is looking to hire for two positions: Director of External Relations (on which more here) and Vice President, OpenHouseGI (more here).
Overview on each of these roles follows; You can find out more about them by clicking here here.
Director of External Relations. Two key words drive so much of what we do on the Island: "welcoming" and "visible" and the Director will own all strategies and programs to insure that we are both welcoming and visible. This includes but is not limited to media relations, social media and the website. The Director will own work on the Island and in communities to insure that all New Yorkers, and increasingly tourists too, know about the island and feel welcome here. With the opening of the HIlls this summer, there will be a big push to make the Island more visible than ever.
Second, and equally important, we have a new position VP of OpenHouseGi. Governors Island has become New York City's "shared space for art and play" in large part due to this program, where we provide free space to any organization that creates a free public experience. The public enjoys exhibits, festivals and performances created by dozens of organizations each season. Now we want to raise the program up a level, fostering more collaboration, new ideas, and big ideas, without compromising our commitment to openness and our formula of no curation, no selection and no funding. The Island is recognized as a national model but we want to continue to learn and improve and grow.
Art & Anatomy Workshop with Eleanor Crook and Dr Sarah Simblet at Ruskin School of Art, Oxford University, July and September 2016
Our good friend Eleanor Crook and Dr Sarah Simblet--author of Anatomy for the Artist--will be teaching an Art and Anatomy course at Ruskin School of Art at Oxford University.
The classes take place July and September of this year. Full details follow. You can also find out more here!
The Ruskin School of Art offers a unique opportunity to those with wish to study and explore human anatomy with highly regarded artists and anatomists. The Ruskin remains the last art school in Europe to incorporate such an in depth study of anatomy within its teaching.Art and Anatomy 2016 - Two CoursesDr Sarah Simblet and Eleanor Crook will together teach and guide students on 2 seven day courses in the summer of 2016. Both courses will offer the same programme.Art and Anatomy Course One: Monday 18th - Sunday 24th July 2016Art and Anatomy Course Two: Monday 12th September - Sunday 18th September 2016The programme has been developed around Sarah’s best selling book, Anatomy for the Artist, Dorling Kindersley. The course covers aspects of human anatomy, its drawing and history, and continues to be highly regarded and very successful.This will be the fifth year of the Art and Anatomy course and a wide variety of artists have benefited from its unique programme - sixth formers, medical artists and students, professional and amateur artists of traditional and contemporary practice. You will take part in intensive workshops, lectures and group discussions on human anatomy, with time for personal studio work.Consistently interesting and beneficial and I very much enjoyed the presentations.' Art and Anatomy participant, 2014.‘This is without a doubt the most informative, exciting and challenging short course I have taken for art. The tutors are friendly and diligent making this an unmissable experience for budding artists’ Art and Anatomy participant, 2013Participants need to bring their preferred drawing materials and the Ruskin will provide easels, paper, a mounted skull and torso armature, wire and wax for modelling, and life models.No academic or artistic criteria is required for attendance on this course. Participants can expect to leave with a portfolio of new work, a much wider understanding of the subject explored and a wealth of ideas for future artistic development.ProgrammeDay 1 : Structural DrawingDay 2 : The SkeletonDay 3 : MusculatureDay 4 : Wax Modelling Head and NeckDay 5 : Wax Modelling Ecorché (muscle figure)Day 6 : Personal studio time with tutorDay 7 : Life DrawingChargesRuskin courses are only available to adults over the age of 16 years.There are three payment rates available:
- Adult - £980.00
- Oxford University students, staff and alumni (10% discount) - £882.00
- Students (with a current NUS card) and OAPs (5% discount) - £931.00
If you select a discounted booking rate, you will need to present your University alumni/staff card, NUS card, or some form of identification indicating your OAP status at the start of the course.To book a place on any of the Ruskin short courses, please visit the University's online store via this link: https://www.oxforduniversitystores.co.ukHead and Neck (Portraiture) Anatomy : Monday 1st - Friday 5th August 2016For the third year, Eleanor and Sarah will offer a five day course on the head and neck in the summer of 2016. This programme was developed in response to the overwhelming success of the Art and Anatomy course and is a dynamic programme that explores human anatomy in greater depth.'Studying the anatomy of the head has helped me with my drawing and most importantly my perception of the structure for sculpture' Participant on the Head and Neck course, 2014An intensive, practical Fine Art course on the anatomy, physiology and expression of the human head, offering specialist lectures in anatomy, forensic facial reconstruction and the art history of portraiture. Studio sessions included drawing the head from life, sculpting facial musculature over a cast skull using wax, visits to museums to look at expressive heads in diverse cultures, and also the making of rapid improvised sculptures using found materials to explore the very essence of human expression and communication through the medium of portraiture.ProgrammeDay 1 : Anatomy of the human skullDay 2 : Muscles of facial expression and wax sculpting over a life size castDay 3 : Portrait head sculpting in clayDay 4 : Site visit and studio workDay 5 : Skull decorating to create a powerful head objectChargesRuskin courses are only available to adults over the age of 16 years.There are three payment rates available:
- Adult - £750.00
- Oxford University students, staff and alumni (10% discount) - £675.00
- Students (with a current NUS card) and OAPs (5% discount) - £712.50
If you select a discounted booking rate, you will need to present your University alumni/staff card, NUS card, or some form of identification indicating your OAP status at the start of the course.To book a place on this course, please visit the University's online store via this link: https://www.oxforduniversitystores.co.ukSculpting the Body : Anatomy, Life Modelling and Écorché : Monday 26th September - Friday 30th September 2016Sarah and Eleanor will teach you to sculpt the human figure confidently with an understanding of anatomy, designing statue poses, preparing armatures and modelling in clay and wax, culminating in a personal and sophisticated final piece. Eleanor and Sarah will share their expertise in anatomy, materials handling, history of sculpture and figure modelling for an entertaining and intensive 5-day session. You will be able to choose whether to finish your work as a sculpted figure or as an “écorché” (an anatomical muscle figure).Materials and printed reference will be included.ProgrammeDay 1 : Introduction to the skeleton and anatomy of the écorchéDay 2 : Designing a pose and preparing 2 armaturesDay 3 : Clay modelling on an armature and wax modelling on a miniature armature with a life modelDay 4 : Site vist and life modellingDay 5 : Advance figure modelling with life modelChargesRuskin courses are only available to adults over the age of 16 years.There are three payment rates available:
- Adult - £750.00
- Oxford University students, staff and alumni (10% discount) - £675.00
- Students (with a current NUS card) and OAPs (5% discount) - £712.50
If you select a discounted booking rate, you will need to present your University alumni/staff card, NUS card, or some form of identification indicating your OAP status at the start of the course.To book a place on this course, please visit the University's online store via this link: https://www.oxforduniversitystores.co.ukHuman Anatomy Teaching StaffSarah Simblet is an artist who writes and draws. She is also a broadcaster, lecturer and anatomist with broad research interests in the relationship between art, science and history. She has published three major art reference books with Dorling Kindersley: ‘Anatomy for the Artist’, ‘The Drawing Book’ and ‘Botany for the Artist’ and exhibits her drawings through her books. Sarah contributes to contemporary art shows, festivals and live events and her work is held in national and private collections. She contributes regularly to British, American and international television and radio programmes about science and art, and consults on national exhibitions. She is Tutor in Anatomy at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, University of Oxford, a freelance lecturer at the National Gallery London, and Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, and is an academic member of Wolfson College, Oxford.
Eleanor Crook is one of the world’s leading anatomical modellers in wax: a contemporary artist who uses traditional and newly invented techniques to express and explain the drama of the human body. Eleanor trained in sculpture at Central St Martins and the Royal Academy and makes figures and effigies in wax, carved wood and lifelike media, with exhibitions nationally and internationally. She has sculpted anatomical and pathological waxworks for the Gordon Museum of Pathology at Guy's Hospital, London's Science Museum, and the Royal College of Surgeons of England, and is a lecturer at the Royal College of Art and the Central St Martin School of Art in London.
Monday, February 22, 2016
Post-Mortem Portraits of the Dukes of Württemberg: Guest Post by Eric Huang, Morbid Anatomy Foreign Corespondent
In the following guest post, Morbid Anatomy foreign corespondent Eric Huang reports on the post-mortem portraits of the Dukes of Württemberg, which can be seen in the crypt of Altes Schlos (or "Old Castle), a Renaissance era castle turned museum in Stuttgart, Germany. All photos are his own.
Death Portraits of the Dukes of Württemberg
The Landesmuseum in Stuttgart is a history museum about Württemberg, formerly a kingdom and today a part of the German state of Baden-Württemberg. The collection is formed in large part by the 16th-century wunderkammer of the royal family. Paintings, decorative art, sacred art, as well as an impressive collection of clocks and glassware, fill the Altes Schloss, a Renaissance era castle and former royal residence that now houses the museum.
The only part of the building that retains its Renaissance character is the crypt. Several members of the royal family of Württemberg are buried in the inner chamber beneath grand marble monuments. The entryway to the burial chamber is an art gallery of late 17th and early 18th century death portraits. Dukes and Duchesses of the land are painted as if asleep with putti and loved ones in mournful attendance.
Herzogin Magdelena Sybilla Württemberg’s portrait (4th image down) is unique in that she is depicted sitting up rather than in a state of repose. She has been dressed in high mourning and posed in a chair, her head propped up by a left elbow that leans casually on a casket. A grave marker flanked by skeletons stands in the background to the right. The background appears to be a depiction of the burial chamber in the next room, although the room looks a different today with more recent 19th century monuments in place of the 17th century caskets.
It takes about three hours to properly tour the museum and all its collections. The crypt is a little difficult to find, though. Use the lifts in the lobby to reach the first floor Mezzanine level. Then follow the arrows to exit out of the castle, walk along a veranda, and down the stairwell to the crypt. Ask a staff member if you can’t find it, as the crypt is an unmissable feature of the museum.
Sunday, February 21, 2016
Second Annual Morbid Anatomy Museum Gala With Honorary Chair Parker Posey and Afterparty With DJ Set by Electronic Music Pioneer Vince Clarke!
We are thrilled to announce our second annual Morbid Anatomy Museum Gala taking place April 12th at the venue of our generous sponsor The Bell House. We hope you will join us and actress Parker Posey for an exciting evening of dinner, cocktails generously supplied by our sponsor Hendrick's Gin, performances and special guests; an auction of one-of-a-kind art, objects, and experiences; and much more, all in support of The Morbid Anatomy Museum!
In addition to all this, VIP ticket holders will enjoy a champagne toast at Morbid Anatomy Museum—just a moment's walk from the Bell House—with honorary chair Parker Posey along with a private tour of our current exhibition with its curator Ryan Matthew Cohn of TV's Oddities. All guests will enjoy a fine catered meal, drinks, auction and performances, and are invited to stay for an afterparty featuring complimentary beer by sponsor Sixpoint Brewery and the DJ stylings of electronic music pioneer Vince Clarke.
Tickets are also available separately for those who wish to attend only the afterparty—an exciting night of music and drinks courtesy of Vince Clarke and sponsor Sixpoint Brewery!
We hope to see you there!
Second Annual Morbid Anatomy Museum Gala with Honorary Chair Parker PoseyTuesday, April 12, 2016, 7 PM (6:30 for VIP)$250 (Regular Ticket), $500 (VIP Ticket with champagne toast at The Museum); $2500 (Table for 5, includes VIP champagne toast); $5000 (Table for 10, includes VIP champagne toast) Tickets and more info here.Gala Afterparty with DJ Set by Electronic Music Pioneer Vince Clarke and Complimentary Beer Courtesy of Sixpoint BreweryTuesday, April 12, 2016, 9 pm till late, $50. Tickets and more info here.
Image: Dance of Death, Bernt Notke 1463-66
Sunday, February 14, 2016
Happy Valentine's Day from All of Us at Morbid Anatomy!
Top image: Sacred Heart of Jesus with Saint Ignatius of Loyola and Saint Louis Gonzaga, José de Páez, Mexico, 1727-179
Bottom image: Husband and Wife Nobles, from Cycle of Scenes of Living Skeletons, Paolo Vincenzo Bonomini, (1757 – 1839)
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Sign Petition to Save the the Wonderful Musée Depuytren of Paris!
We have just learned that one our favorite medical museums--The Musée Depuytren of Paris--is in danger of closing.
There is a petition being circulated to protest this closure; we have signed, and hope you will, too! You can do so by clicking here.
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Morbid Anatomy 2nd Annual Gala! Insect Petting Zoo! The Cult of Fashion! Demystifying Shamanism! Camera Obscura Workshop! Life After Near Death!
We have many wonderful upcoming events at the Morbid Anatomy Museum!
First, please save the date for the second annual Morbid Anatomy Museum Gala and Afterparty. We hope you can join us for a special evening of dinner, drinks, performances & special guests, an auction of one-of-a-kind art, objects, and experiences, and much more this April 12th at the Bell House.
We'll venture through the underbelly of 19th century Paris and learn about its labor conditions, prostitution, drinking, crime, and popular entertainment with author Luc Sante (Wednesday, February 10th, 7 pm); host a family-friendly insect and reptile petting zoo with NYU biology student, Aaron Rodriguez (Monday, February 29th, 7pm); look at the integral role of the dream in alchemical and creative practice with alchemist Brian Cotnoir (Monday, April 4th, 7 pm); Andi Harriman offers a history of goth subculture from its DIY beginnings in the late 70s to its demise at the turn of the 90s (Wednesday, April 27th, 7 pm); and we'll teach the 17th century of vanitas and camera obscura making with Amy-Claire Huestis (Saturday March 5th,12 pm to 5 pm).
We'll explore the costuming of shamans and tribal leaders, kings and queens, and warriors and witches (Thursday, March 17th, 7 pm); Morbid Anatomy favorite Dr. Stanley Krippner returns with a look at historical and contemporary shamanic practices, herbal knowledge, and sacred rituals with complementary Trinity Absinthe by our sponsor Overland Distillery (Thursday, April 14th, 7 pm); we'll discuss what really happens when someone returns from a near death experience (Thursday, April 21st, 7 pm) and examine why humanity has universally rejected the philosopher Diogenes's argument against caring for human remains (Monday, May 2nd, 7 pm).
Please join us this week for a closer look at Thomas Edison's lesser known experiments into communicating with the dead (Tuesday, January 26th, 8 pm);a Stereo Realist viewing party featuring fully-restored stereoscopic viewers, original midcentury slides and period tunes (Wednesday, January 27th, 8 pm); a explorations of icons of mortality in art with a focus on 17th century Dutch vanitas paintings (Thursday, January 28th, 8 pm); and an unmasking of the hooded executioner of art and lore with a fascinating history of the death penalty (Saturday, January 30th, 8 pm).
A few tickets are still available for our upcoming anthropomorphic mouse taxidermy class with Amber Maykut (Saturday, January 30th, 12 pm to 4 pm) and Victorian hair art workshop with master jeweler Karen Bachmann (Sunday, January 31st, 11 am to 6 PM).
For our friends in Spain, we hope to see you at this year's Congress for Curious People sponsored by Hendrick's Gin February 3rd to 7th. Learn more about the programming by clicking through for day 1, day 2, night 2, day 3, day 4, night 4,
and day 5.
Hope to see you there!
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IMMEDIATELY UPCOMING EVENTS
Midcentury Stereopanorama with Eric Drysdale: Look and see the 1950s in 3-D!Wednesday, January 27th, 8 pm, $20. Tickets and more info here.Deathly Contemplation: 17th Century Dutch Vanitas Paintings: An Illustrated lecture with Lauren Davis
Thursday, January 28th, 8 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.The Executioner, Unhooded: An Illustrated Lecture with Alison KinneySaturday, January 30th, 8 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.Anthropomorphic Mouse Taxidermy Class with Amber Maykut
Saturday, January 30th, 12 pm to 4 pm, $120. Tickets and more info here.Victorian Hair Art Workshop with Master Jeweler Karen BachmannSunday, January 31st, 11 am to 6 PM, $150. Tickets and more info here.
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NEWLY ANNOUNCED EVENTS
The Other Paris: The Shadow Side of 19th Century Paris, Lecture and Book Signing with Luc Sante, Author of Low LifeWednesday, February 10th, 7 pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.Insect, Arachnid and Reptile Petting Zoo with NYU Biology Student Aaron RodriguezMonday, February 29th, 7pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.Vanitas, Fleeting Time, A Camera Obscura Workshop and Inquiry with Artist Amy-Claire HuestisSaturday March 5th,12 pm to 5 pm, $85. Tickets and more info here.The Cult of Fashion, An Illustrated Lecture with Alexis KarlThursday, March 17th, 7 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.Alchemy and Dream: The Lunar Realm of Alchemy, An Illustrated Lecture with Brian CotnoirMonday, April 4th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.Save the Date for the Second Annual Morbid Anatomy Museum Gala and AfterpartyTuesday, April 12, 2016 at The Bell House (149 7th Street, Brooklyn). More info here.Demystifying Shamanism: An Illustrated Presentation with Dr. Stanley KrippnerThursday, April 14th, 7 pm, $15. Tickets and more info here.Life After Near Death, An Illustrated Lecture with Debra DiamondThursday, April 21st, 7 pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.Goth 101: A History of the Postpunk and Goth Subculture, 1978 - 1992, An Illustrated Lecture with Andi HarrimanWednesday, April 27th, 7 pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.The Work of the Dead: A Cultural History of Mortal Remains, An Illustrated Lecture with Historian Thomas W. Laqueur, University of California at BerkeleyMonday, May 2nd, 7 pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.
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CONGRESS FOR CURIOUS PEOPLE 2016 IN MADRID, SPAIN
Morbid Anatomy Day of Anatomy and AnthropologyWednesday, February 3, 5:00pm, Faculty of Medicine (plaza Ramón y Cajal, Madrid) 16 euros. Tickets and more info here.Madrid in the Baroque Era: A Theatrical and Spectacular CityThursday, February 4, Equestrian monument of Felipe IV, Plaza de Oriente, 5:00 p.m. 22 euros. Tickets and more info here.MADRID Strange Phenomena: A Night of MentalismThursday February 4, Calle Santa Ana 6, 10 p.m. 17 euros. Tickets and more infohere.The Secrets of the National Museum of Natural SciencesFriday, February 5, Starting point: corresponding to the "tickets" doors in the museum (Calle Jose Gutierrez Abascal 2) door 7:00 p.m. 20 euros. Tickets and more info here.Special Visit to the XIX century Homeopathic Hospital of "San Jose" and lecturesEloy Gonzalo Street, 3. 10:30 a.m. Only for guests.Carnival Gala: Surrealist Masked Ball in the Palace Duarte
Palace Duarte, street Mancebos 5, Palace Opening: Saturday February 6, 9:30 p.m to 2:00 a.m. Tickets and more info here.
Madrid and the FreemasonryEgyptian Temple of Debod, 11 a.m. 14 euros. Tickets and more info here.
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ALL UPCOMING EVENTS
Here Lies Fluffy: Hartsdale Pet Cemetery, A Final Resting Place: An Illustrated Lecture with Elizabeth BromanThursday, February 4th, 2016, 7 pm (lecture will start at 7:15 sharp), $8. Tickets and more info here.Death is in Our Hearts: Meditations on Death's at Tractional Force, an Illustrated Lecture with Carl AbrahamssonFriday, February 5th, 7 pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.Jackalope or Traditional Rabbit Shoulder Mount Taxidermy ClassSaturday, February 6th,12 pm to 6 pm, $250. Tickets and more info here.The Other Paris: The Shadow Side of 19th Century Paris, Lecture and Book Signing with Luc Sante, author of Low LifeWednesday, February 10th, 7 pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.The Flapper Revolution: An Illustrated Lecture With Mel Gordon, Author of Voluptuous PanicThursday, February 11th, 7 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.Horizontal Collaboration: The Erotic World of Paris, 1920-1946 with Mel Gordon, author of Voluptuous Panic, Sponsored by Overland Distillery, Proud Makers of Trinity AbsintheFriday, February 12th, 7 pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.If You Feel It, Peel It: 42nd Street Peepshow Films and Beyond programmed by MM Serra and Josh LewisSaturday, February 13th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.Anthropomorphic Insect Shadowbox Workshop: Valentine Day's Special with Daisy Tainton, formerly Senior Insect Preparator at the American Museum of Natural HistorySunday, February 14th, 1 to 4 pm, $75. Tickets and more info here.Beggar's Banquet: The History of Sin Eaters: An Illustrated Lecture with Karen Bachmann
Tuesday, February 16th, 7 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.Midcentury Stereopanorama with Eric Drysdale: Look and see the 1950s in 3-D!Wednesday, February 17th, 8 pm, $20. Tickets and more info here.Surrealism and Alchemy: More Than Just a Pretty Picture: An Illustrated Lecture with Brian CotnoirFebruary 19th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.Mole Mount Taxidermy Workshop with Katie InnamoratoSunday, February 7th, 12 pm to 6 pm, $250. Tickets and more info here.Mütter Museum Presents: The Skin She Lived In: Anthropodermic Books at College of Physicians of Philadelphia: Illustrated Lecture by Beth Lander, Introduced and Moderated by Daniel K. SmithMonday, February 22nd, 7 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari on 16mm with live music by M.V. CarbonWednesday, February 24th, 7 pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.Morbid Academy Presents: Stalking Weird History: A Conversation with Robert Damon Schneck and Mitch HorowitzThursday, February 25th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.Fancy Rat Taxidermy Class with Divya AnantharamanSaturday, February 27th, 12 pm - 6 pm, $200. Tickets and more info here.European Starling Taxidermy Class with Divya AnantharamanSunday, February 28th, 12 pm - 7 pm, $275. Tickets and more info here.Insect, Arachnid and Reptile Petting Zoo with NYU Biology Student Aaron RodriguezMonday, February 29th, 7pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.Tarot Reading, Palmistry and Astrology with The Tarot SocietyMonday, February 29th, 6 pm to 8 pm. Sliding scale. More info here.From Grand Guignol to the Classic Horror Movies of the 1930s: Elliot Passantino's History of Horror Film, Part 1Tuesday, March 1, 2016, 7 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.Vanitas, Fleeting Time, A Camera Obscura Workshop and Inquiry with Artist Amy-Claire HuestisSaturday March 5th,12 pm to 5 pm, $85. Tickets and more info here.Morbid Anatomy Flea Market at the Bell HouseSunday, March 6th,12 pm to 6 pm (11 am for members). More info here.The Good Death: An Exploration in Dying in America: An Illustrated Lecture with Ann NeumannThursday March 10th, 7pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.Architecture of Initiation: Alchemy and the Theater of Memory: An Illustrated Lecture with Brian CotnoirFriday, March 11th, 7pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.Morbid Academy Presents: The Real Paranormal: A Conversation with Stacy Horn and Mitch HorowitzWednesday, March 16th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.The Cult of Fashion, An Illustrated Lecture with Alexis KarlThursday, March 17th, 7 pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.Katherine Bauer's "Psycho Pussy Slaughter" and other Fatal, Feline Rites and Rituals: Screening with 16mm film and live music!Wednesday, March 23rd, 7 pm $10. Tickets and more info here.Alchemy and Dream: The Lunar Realm of Alchemy, An Illustrated Lecture with Brian CotnoirMonday, April 4th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.Morbid Academy Presents: Tales from the Crypt: A Conversation with Ptolemy Tompkins and Mitch HorowitzWednesday, April 6th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.The Witch of Lime Street: Séance, Seduction, and Houdini in the Spirit World: An Illustrated Lecture with David JaherMonday, April 11th, 7 pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.Save the Date for the Second Annual Morbid Anatomy Museum Gala and AfterpartyTuesday, April 12, 2016 at The Bell House (149 7th Street, Brooklyn). More info here.Atomic Doomsday Battle of the DJs: 78 Records vs. 16mm FilmWednesday, April 13th, 7 pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.Demystifying Shamanism: An Illustrated Presentation with Dr. Stanley KrippnerThursday, April 14th, 7 pm, $15. Tickets and more info here.Bringing Back the Cabinet of Curiosities, Including a Brief and Wondrous History of the Wunderkammer: An Illustrated Lecture with Susan HarlanTuesday, April 19th, 7pm, $8. Tickets and more info here.Life After Near Death, An Illustrated Lecture with Debra DiamondThursday, April 21st, 7 pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.Goth 101: A History of the Postpunk and Goth Subculture, 1978 - 1992, An Illustrated Lecture with Andi HarrimanWednesday, April 27th, 7 pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.Murnau's Faust (1926) on 16mm Film With Live Music by Bradford Reed and Geoff GershFriday, April 29th, 7 pm, $12. Tickets and more info here.The Work of the Dead: A Cultural History of Mortal Remains, An Illustrated Lecture with Historian Thomas W. Laqueur, University of California at BerkeleyMonday, May 2nd, 7 pm, $5. Tickets and more info here.Morbid Academy Presents: Things that go Bump, a conversation with Shannon Taggart and Mitch HorowitzWednesday, May 18th, 7pm, $10. Tickets and more info here.
Henrick's Congress for Curious People in Madrid, Co-presented by The Morbid Anatomy Museum and Atlas Obscura
Morbid Anatomy is delighted to announce a new, Madrid-based Congress for Curious People, sponsored by Hendrick's Gin and co-presented by The Morbid Anatomy Museum and Atlas Obscura!
Full info follows; All events will have English translation or information provided in English.Hope to see some or our Spain-based readers at one or more of these terrific events!
Full info follows; All events will have English translation or information provided in English.Hope to see some or our Spain-based readers at one or more of these terrific events!
Henrick's Congress for Curious People in Madrid, Co-presented by The Morbid Anatomy Museum and Atlas Obscura
Dates: Wednesday, February 3 - Sunday, February 7
Times: Variable
Admission: Variable
Hendrick's Gin is pleased to present the "Congress for Curious People" in Madrid, a cultural week from February 3-7 dedicated to discovering the most unusual places in the capital of Spain. This Congress will be directed by Pablo Raijenstein (mentalist and Hendrick's Gin ambassador in Spain) and Felipe Trigo (an Spanish events producer, historian and cultural guide) in collaboration with The Morbid Anatomy Museum and Atlas Obscura.
The Congress will feature special activities and events; walking tours devoted to Madrid during the baroque era and the Masonic influence in Madrid; exclusive visits to museums of natural sciences, medicine and anatomy; and talks by Morbid Anatomy creative director Joanna Ebenstein and Atlas Obscura's co-dirctor Dylan Thuras. This new edition of "Congress" promises to be spectacular with a night of mentalism by Pablo Raijenstein and a carnival gala at the palace Duarte, the "Surrealist Ball", with Lady Bon Bon, the main performer in Kriminal Kabarett.
Following is full is of events with links to find out more.
Morbid Anatomy Day of Anatomy and Anthropology
Wednesday, February 3
https://www.facebook.com/events/1654831934775859/
"MORBID ANATOMY DAY" special visit to the museums of Anatomy and Anthropology of the "Universidad Complutense de Madrid".
Wednesday, February 3, 5:00pm, Faculty of Medicine (plaza Ramón y Cajal, Madrid)
With the collaboration of Joanna Ebenstein, creative director in the Morbid Anatomy Museum from New York. The day will include a combined tour and visit to two museums with priceless jewels.First, we will visit the Museum of Anatomy "Javier Puerta" where we will meet the director, Fermin Viejo. This collection is very important for its spectacular series of wax figures from the 18th century, commissioned by the Royal College of Surgery ("Real Colegio de Cirugía de San Carlos"). Later, we will continue the day at the Museum of Medical Anthropology, Forensics, and Forensic Paleopathology "Reverte Coma", located in the same Faculty of Medicine. Guided by a specialist, we will discover the secrets of a true cabinet of curiosities created in the twentieth century. Among countless examples, we will see an impressive collection of Egyptian mummies, vestiges of evolutionary anthropology and ritual body modification.
Important notice: it is strictly forbidden to take pictures in both museums.
Madrid in the Baroque Era: A Theatrical and Spectacular city
Thursday, February 4
https://www.facebook.com/events/1525048727794782/
Starting and schedule: Equestrian monument of Felipe IV, Plaza de Oriente. 5:00 p.m.
In this itinerary between the Plaza de Oriente and Calle Toledo we relive an era, the Baroque, in which theatricality and spectacle were omnipresent in all facets of daily life, as a sign of artistic, royal and ecclesiastical patronage. Patronage was also mass propaganda. Discover those passages in the history of Old Madrid and the first Bourbons in which the illusory, wonder and extravagance were present in the capital, where the streets and squares were used as true scenarios.The tour begins with a special visit to the Royal Monastery "de la Encarnación" to contemplate the fabulous collection of relics, one of the most comprehensive in the world, and also the treasure with the blood of San Pantaleon. The route continues through the old town, where we will focus on other subjects like alchemy and cabinets of curiosities, the symbolism of the Puerta del Sol, theatrical performances, Inquisition trials and Carnival splendor in the era of the Habsburgs. We end our tour with a visit to the Institute of San Isidro (former Imperial College) where we discuss the relationship between the Jesuits and the Baroque culture of spectacle.
Strange Phenomena: A Night of Mentalism
Thursday, February 4
https://www.facebook.com/events/1512179665751602/
Starting point and time: Calle Santa Ana 6. 10 p.m.
We are pleased to announce "Madrid Strange Phenomena", the first show of mentalism that takes place in a space where strange events have occurred.
With the help of those attending this evening, the mentalist Paul Raijenstein will evoke one of the most shocking events in the history of Madrid: the tragical fire that destroyed the "Novedades" theater in 1929.
This experience, with a capacity of 30 people per session, takes place in the antiques shop "Santa y Señora", the old emergency exit in the former theater. Attendees will discover that they are also a key instrument to clarify the strange events that occur in this unusual space. The show mixes collective hypnosis and mentalism recreating a seance that will leave the audience speechless
This experience was released in January 2015 and has enjoyed unprecedented success for the unique characteristics of the proposal.
The Secrets of the National Museum of Natural Sciences
Friday, February 5
https://www.facebook.com/events/525895254240681/
Starting point: corresponding to the "tickets" doors in the museum (Calle Jose Gutierrez Abascal 2) door 7:00 p.m.
For the first time, we present a unique and exclusive visit to the Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, where a specialized guide will reveal the best kept secrets inside an institution that holds millions of pieces invisible to the general public. We will have a different view of the museum, highlighting the art of taxidermy, the incredible journeys of naturalists and the surprising story of the most emblematic museum specimens. This is the oldest natural sciences museum in our country, with its origin in the Royal Cabinet of Natural History founded in the eighteenth century. Under this cabinet we can admire a restricted public basement where a prodigious collection of species of mammals and birds is stored. This event will have a similar character to the "Morbid Anatomy Museum" special tour organized in the "American Museum of Natural History" in New York.
Special Visit to the XIX century Homeopathic Hospital of "San Jose" and Lectures
Saturday, February 6
https://www.facebook.com/events/1541395092838627/Starting point and time: Eloy Gonzalo Street, 3. 10:30 a.m. Only for guests. Send an e-mail to: curiouscongressmadrid@gmail.com
In the XIX century Homeopathic Hospital of "San Jose" will take place the lecture of the main speakers at the "Hendrick's Congress for Curious People". Previously, with the help of a guide, we will discover the rooms inside the Homeopathic Hospital of "San Jose" as well as the palace of the Marquis del Salado, both great examples of architecture of the first decade of the Spanish Restoration (between 1874 and 1883). Through the small Museum of Homeopathy we discover the origin and practices of this controversial discipline of medicine with many supporters and detractors from the eighteenth century until today.
Then, in the building of the Hospital we will begin our series of lectures with the following speakers:
Joanna Ebenstein, director of "Morbid Anatomy Museum," a New York institution dedicated to the study of anatomical and funerary art. She will tell us the exciting process of creating the museum and her journeys around the world in search of the sublime and the macabre.
Dylan Thuras, director of "Atlas Obscura," the largest virtual compendium of unusual places and secrets around the globe. We will talk about the incredible career of "Atlas Obscura" and the forthcoming book edited by this institution, to be published in mid-2016.
Hendrick's Gin cocktails will be served.
CARNIVAL GALA: Surrealist Masked Ball in the Palace Duarte
Saturday February 6
https://www.facebook.com/events/1541959866115116/
Starting point and time: Palace Duarte, street Mancebos 5
Palace Opening: Saturday February 6 9:30 p.m.. Closing: 2:00 a.m.
Enjoy with us the most unusual and extravagant Carnival in Madrid inside the Palace Duarte, where the gala of the "Hendrick's Congress for Curious People" will take place.Inspired by the memorable "surrealist balls" organized by Salvador Dali in Paris and New York, our Masquerade show will feature Lady Bon Bon, one of the best artists of cabaret and burlesque in our country famous for her performances in "Kriminal Kabarett" more venues in Europe. The "Surrealist Ball" also includes a brief theatrical tour dramatized to discover the history behind the walls of the Palace Duarte, a mansion built in the XVII century. The evening will be accompanied by an eclectic soundtrack (opera, classical, swing revival, lounge, exotika) and a Dj session (80s, new wave, electro vintage).
Dresscode welcome: Any stylish and transgressive attire inspired by the past will be welcome. For the more adventurous, we suggest constumes inspired in surrealist artists or designers: Salvador Dali, Max Ernst, Otto Dix, Paul Delvaux, Schiaparelli, Alexander McQueen ... More suggestions: 1920-1930 fashion, cabaret, dandies, feathers, masks, animal kingdom, African tribes, Orient Express, fetish-glam ... Use your imagination and surprise us!
Included with the entry: Hendrick's Gin cocktail in the palace.
Madrid and Freemasonry
Sunday February 7
https://www.facebook.com/events/163737973998341/
Starting and schedule: Egyptian Temple of Debod, 11 a.m.
A surprising and complete itinerary where we will show you the history of Freemasonry and its privileged relationship with Madrid through politics, society, culture and the arts. We will begin our route in the Egyptian temple of Debod to discuss the myths about the origin of Freemasonry and the meaning of its symbols. We will continue our walk through the Plaza of Spain and the Plaza de Oriente and the neighborhoods of the historic center, ending in front of the Congress of Deputies. We will speak about numerous aspects of Freemasonry in Madrid: their first steps in the eighteenth century and its boom in the Napoleonic era, the last persecutions of the Inquisition, its height and splendor from the revolution of 1868, the controversial history of this institution under various regimes of the twentieth century and his return after 1978. An exclusive opportunity to rediscover a key institution in the history of Europe that often changed the course of art, science, architecture and philosophy.
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