Core77 Photo Gallery: Designing 007 – Fifty Years of Bond Style

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The Barbican celebrates 50 years of Bond films with a huge exhibition featuring costumes, props, gadgets, and design drawings from the Dr No debut in 1962 to Skyfall (the 23rd film) due for release later this year.

Designerly expectations were set at salivation levels with the awesome press release video doing the rounds earlier this month. Stopping by the show this week we’re glad to report moments of child-like glee in contemplation of the impressive array of original concept artwork, guns and gadgets and other gems from the films such as a classic Aston Martin DB5 and Halle Berry’s dagger wielding orange bikini. We’ve got serious design envy for the guys that get to let their creativity loose in the world of 007.

Bond fan’s will be able to revel in 007 design geekery at the Barbican until September 5th, after which the show is set to tour internationally for the next three years.

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Saatchi Online

An art influx with 100 curators in 100 days
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On 18 July 2012, Saatchi launched the world’s largest online exhibition—not a hard claim to make given that most web-based art shows are greeted with little more than raised eyebrows. Still, “100 Curators 100 Days” may very well reshape the perception that viewing art on a computer doesn’t achieve the personal relationship between viewer and artwork offered by a brick-and-mortar museum or gallery.

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We applaud the ambition of Rebecca Wilson, director of the Saatchi Gallery in London and board member of Saatchi Online, who has rounded up an impressive group of curators from the world’s leading arts institutions, including MoMA, LACMA, Palais de Tokyo, Kunsthalle Vienna, the Hirshhorn Museum, Pace/MacGill Gallery and Manifesta8, to name only a few. Each curator was asked to select 10 artists from the more than 60,000 currently exhibited on Saatchi Online. While their curatorial “stamp of approval” will of course lead to more exposure, which means higher selling prices and therefore a more valuable collection for Saatchi, it also positions an opportunity to lift talented young artists out from under the weight of their 60,000 brethren—a significant accomplishment, if even just for 10 days.

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One of the strongest collections on view at this point is curated by Bisi Silva, the founder and director of the Centre for Contemporary Art in Lagos. Before founding CCA in 2007, Silva was a curator of the Dakar Biennale in Senegal, and has since served as co-curator for the second Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art in Greece. In 2010 she was the Independent Curators International inaugural touring curator.

From Saatchi’s online collection, Silva pulled modestly priced works by artists, the majority of whom hail from Europe and the UK. The most arresting pieces are “Holz, Augustastrasse,” a photograph by Dusseldorf-based Andreas Fragel, and “PAWS,” a sculpture by the Brazilian artist Tatiana Blass. Fragel specializes in crisp landscapes taken in forgotten environments, like an overgrown basketball court, a factory loading dock or a muddy freeway underpass. Saatchi has about a dozen of Fragel’s photographs, but still hasn’t snapped up the real gems, which can be seen on Fragel’s website. Blass, on the other hand, works in a wide range of media, including installation, painting, video and paper-based works. Her sculptural and installation work, however, remain the strongest, and “PAWS,” with its conceptual sophistication and play between drama and restraint, makes for a major standout.

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Each day a new curator’s 10 selections are released. Watch the exhibition unfold every day for the remainder of “100 Curators 100 Days.”


Unseen

The inaugural edition of the Amsterdam photography fair focuses on emerging talent and first-time buyers
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Held in a former gasworks site built in Amsterdam in 1885,
Unseen is a new photography fair that features new work by known photographers as well as work by an international group of emerging young talent. This September, more than 50 galleries from all over the world will entice both the seasoned collector and those buying their very first pieces. To provide some guidance for those who fall in the second category, Unseen will offer online courses and a new TV series designed to educate first-time buyers who might feel less intimated shopping in the €1,000 and under Unseen Collection.

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For those looking to expand their collection, be sure to stop by The Michael Hoppen Gallery (UK) as he will be representing the celebrated self-taught photographer,
Alex Prager. Her characteristically cinematic work has appeared in the pages of New York Magazine, The New York Times Magazine and i-D, among others. Most recently Prager was nominated for an Emmy Award for T Magazine’s film series “The Touch of Evil.” It’s no surprise that Prager cites William Eggleston and Alfred Hitchcock as key influences. Indeed, her bright, surreal and perfectly composed images—like those in her Film Still series—are the ideal meeting point of those two masters.

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Two lesser-known photographers represented by Martin van Zomeren Gallery (NL) are the Dutch duo Maurice Scheltens and Liesbeth Abbenes, who have collaborated as
Scheltens & Abbenes for the past decade. Given their longevity as well as a long list of accolades, it’s surprising that they aren’t more of a household name, though with their recent 2012 Infinity Award in Applied/Fashion/Advertising from the International Center for Photography, that might be about to change. ICP described their work as an “experiment with converting spatial dimensions into flat surfaces and an exploration of photography’s potential for creating illusion.”

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Scheltens & Abbenes are particularly adept at arranging objects into compositions that are as captivating as they are meticulous. A group of perfume bottles becomes a candy-colored miniature sculpture for a fashion editorial and a selection of cheeses and cold cuts becomes a study in texture and form. Scheltens & Abbenes’ work for Vitra is particularly spot on. By confining a collection of the design brand’s minimal offerings within a small square, they not only present a compelling visual story that plays with our sense of scale and perspective, but they also capture Vitra and Morisson’s entire aesthetic.

The first edition of Unseen runs 19-23 September 2012 at Amsterdam’s Westergasfabriek. Visit the fair website for more information.


Vignettes at Capsule

The NYC menswear edition invites other design disciplines to take the show beyond fashion

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Now in its fifth year, Capsule aims to offer something different than the expected fashion tradeshow. Inspired by the simple idea that expanding one’s awareness beyond their primary industry fosters creativity and progress, this season the New York installment of Capsule introduces “Vignettes,” a set of unique installations that bring together ventures in art, design, literature and beyond for the opportunity to share experiences and ideas. The eight enterprises given the open-ended invitation to present include Best Made Company, byKenyan, Gingko Press, Hugo & Marie, Jack Spade, King’s Country Salvage, Matter and New York Art Department. Taking the shape of pop-up shops, mobile galleries and sculptural structures, the following are three vignettes that stood out for their originality.

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Given their plot, Best Made Co erected a 14′ x 16′ canvas tent to serve as a experiential mini-shop and homebase for all visiting outdoor enthusiasts. Offering refuge from the menswear madness the massive tent is stocked inside and out with everything one needs to live in the outdoors, whether in the remote forest or the middle of a city. While the site may seem a bit out of place at first glance, Best Made’s commitment to making high quality products with a rich history parallels the mission driving many other brands showing at Capsule. “To put us in this context seemed like an interesting juxtaposition, but it also made sense. We see it as an opportunity to be exposed to a lot of interesting people that would probably enjoy what we’re doing, and vice versa,” says Best Made designer Hunter Craighill.

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“It’s also a good opportunity to launch a handful of new products and get some feedback on the direction we’re moving in,” adds Craighill. “We think the other exhibitors will appreciate the different products we offer, and the details we consider.” These soon-to-be-released products include a rigid, all-purpose gear bag made with waxed canvas, ballistics nylon and kevlar; a T-shirt made with Japanese cotton slub; and a wool blanket by Pendleton for Best Made.

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Taking a design-driven approach to the open-ended brief to create their own Vignette is NYC’s design shop and manufacturer Matter. Conceived by head designers Jamie Gray and Danielle Epstein, the skeleton of a structure acts as a sort of dressing room shrine. As Gray puts it, the concept creates a “slice or portion of a retail or showroom experience, capturing the intimate moment of being in the dressing lounge.” At the center of the set-up is Boxer, a modular storage system Matter debuted at ICFF earlier this year. By starting with the furniture and designing the structure, the two designed their Vignette from the outside in, or “working backward” as Epstein says. This unconventional approach allowed the structure design to evolve naturally from the its first sketch on a napkin through digital design and, eventually, construction.

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“Capsule had this vision of design not necessarily being just about fashion or just about clothing or just about one particular aspect, and that’s something where we also see a lot of potential,” says Epstein. Speaking to this idea of crossing over the boundaries between design disciplines, select garments by like-minded labels can be found displayed throughout the structure alongside Matter designs.

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Brooklyn-based creative agency Hugo & Marie created a minimalist structure that acts as a transparent gallery showcasing work by artists the agency represents. Consisting of little more than a few pieces of free-standing scaffolding, the Vignette offers passerbys a moment of tranquility with a place to sit and consider art as design.

For a closer look at the creative use of space in these three Vignettes see the slideshow.

Images by Graham Hiemstra


The 18th Biennale of Sydney

Contemporary art takes over the Harbor City

by Alex Vitlin

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Since 1973 the Biennale of Sydney has presented an exciting three-month program of contemporary visual arts throughout the city. This year’s 18th Biennale of Sydney is built around the theme, “All Our Relations,” a deliberately rich phrase—does it refer to family? Diplomacy? Proximity of concept?

The Biennale runs through three main venues—the Museum of Contemporary Art, the Art Gallery of NSW, and Cockatoo Island, as well as at satellite sites in the inner city. More than 100 works are on show, curated by co-artistic directors Gerald McMaster and Catherine de Zegher.

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More than 50 works have been installed on Cockatoo Island, a former naval yard, and the artists exhibiting on the island have consciously made use of the leftover buildings and equipment. Fujiko Nakaya‘s “Living Chasm” fills the space between a former turbine hall and cliff face with fog, creating a 150-foot-high misted abyss.

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Tiffany Singh‘s work is almost inaudible behind a wall, but stepping through a low opening reveals 1,000 wind chimes playing to the changing character of the wind at the island’s westernmost tip.

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NYC-based artist Alan Michelson finds a tangible correspondence between the mire of Newtown Creek, located between Brooklyn and Queens, and the forlorn industrial majesty of Cockatoo Island in “Mespat.” Housed in an abandoned crane house,the work comprises a video projected onto stained-white turkey feathers.

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Other works are installed in early settlement convict buildings, painted onto the launching slips of the island, and Iris Häussler works within an old residence that still holds the bizarre beeswax sculpting of a wayward city ranger who worked on the island.

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Off the island, Postcommodity has installed their work “Do You Remember When” in the Art Gallery of NSW. Previously installed at ASU’s Ceramic Art Research Center, the work cuts out a slab of the Art Gallery of NSW‘s 1874 marble floor to reveal the earth below. Especially in Sydney, where British settlement first occurred in Australia, it is a poignant consideration of the touch points between indigenous Australian and later cultures.

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In the former working wharves of Pier 2/3, Tiffany Singh presents more wind chimes, in this case to be taken home, painted and returned to the island. Further into the space Honore d’O‘s paper forms fill the old wooden space with an organic continuity.

The 18th Biennale of Sydney runs until 16 September 2012. Free ferries to Cockatoo Island run 10am-6pm every day.

Please see the slideshow for photo credit information.


Core77 Photo Gallery: Show RCA 2012

RCA-Show-2012.jpgPhotography by Brit Leissler for Core77

This year’s Royal College of Art annual summer show included work by the greatest number of graduating students in the college’s 175-year history. Nearly 500 art and design postgraduate students from more than 40 countries exhibited the results of their creative undertakings during the past two years in what is considered to be one of London’s most prestigious creative hubs.

Show RCA 2012 took place simultaneously in six buildings across the college’s two campuses in Battersea and Kensington. We scoped out the best work on both sites, from the Design Products, Design Interactions, Innovation Design Engineering, and Vehicle Design departments.

Projects ran the full gamut from the subversive to socially responsible to scientific and engineering research driven. Some of our favorites included the proposal for a one way ticket to space, an eight-wheel skateboard designed for riding down stairs, the nutritious grasshopper pate, a superstitious trading algorithm that trades live on the stock market based on numerology and the moon, and a thread-wrapping machine for binding parts together to create objects. Check it all out in our latest gallery.

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Core77 Photo Gallery: Metal Molding in the South of Brazil

Brazil-Metal-Tour.jpgNew York-based designer and educator Anna Rabinowicz shares her photos from a recent trip researching metal factories in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.

Guest post by Anna Rabinowicz

As part of my research on bio-inspired design, I took a trip to the south of Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul), where, for nearly the past ten years, I have worked with artisans to create my designs. On this trip, I decided to investigate the metal molding industry in this region, with the hope of uncovering new manufacturing and collaborative opportunities.

During the course of this journey, I visited both sand and die casting facilities, each with their own level of technology and craft. The sand casting facilities showcased the least expensive and most primitive of the processes, in which molten metal is poured into a sand mold. Other factories focused on die casting, a process by which molten metal is poured into a machined mold (or “tool”), to produce higher-volume parts. This process affords thinner-walled parts, sharper detail, and greater precision and flexibility of materials; but also has an associated mold fee. One horizontal cold-chamber die casting facility that I visited utilizes such a precise process that the Brazilians even called it by the misnomer of “metal injection molding.” This process utilizes extremely expensive molds, but creates beautifully-detailed parts, with excellent surface finish.

During this trip, each factory emphasized the percentage of aluminum that they recycle; all claimed that they recycle between 99-100%. One reason that they are able to achieve this high recycling rate is that they use ethanol instead of using typical oil-based lubricants, when machining their parts after casting. According to Jose Augusto of Fundicao Zatti LTDA (Imeza), ethanol is used because, unlike traditional cutting fluids, it evaporates, leaving virtually no residue on the aluminum chips. When factories use traditional lubricants, and put their chips (coated in lubricant) into the furnace to be re-melted, this liquid ignites, leading to losses of about 30% to 40% of the metal. With ethanol, this loss is reduced to approximately 12%!

In fact, Brazil has one of the best global recycling rates for aluminum. According to the World Steel Association, in 2005, Brazil recycled over 96% of its aluminum cans.

Metal molding in the south of Brazil is a fast-growing industry, one which primarily appears to be supporting Brazil’s burgeoning domestic market. I believe that the challenge for foreign designers wishing to work with these manufacturers is to properly engage their interest; all seem to be operating at capacity simply to supply the domestic market. Another challenge is price — as the cost of labor and materials in Brazil is rising rapidly, the manufacturing quotes that I obtained after the trip were more than double those quoted in Asia. In order to work with Brazilian manufacturers in this region, speaking Portuguese is a major advantage, as is the willingness to travel to Brazil and to spend time in the factories. After ten years of doing business in Brazil, it is clear that building personal and long-standing relationships with the factory owners, and showing seriousness by returning year after year, are the keys to successfully working with manufacturers in this region.

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About Anna Rabinowicz
Anna Rabinowicz is the founder of RabLabs, a home design company that creates objects inspired by nature which fuse ancient, precious materials with cutting-edge design. Having designed such intricate objects as prosthetic knees and devices for cardiac surgery, as well as webcams and concept car interiors for consultancies like IDEO Product Development and Design Continuum, she brings her experience and understanding of biology and nature to the design of elegant objects for the home.

Anna is also an Associate Professor in the Product Design department of Parsons The New School for Design.

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Suriani

Animal-human hybrid stickers invading Parisian streets and a gallery

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While marketing and mainstream communications campaigns have derived branding inspiration in the comic-like cartoon style of street art, and the values attached to its culture—freedom, community, transgression—the paradox still exists to see it framed and sold through traditional art channels.

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We caught up with street artist Rafael Suriani at his recent show, “Collages Urbains”, at Cabinet d’amateur gallery in Paris, where he told us more about street art and his relationship with the medium.

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Suriani’s mark features animals, surviving and thriving in the streets for its powerful and highly recognizable aesthetic. In his half-human-half-animal figures, the animal faces act as liberating masks, allowing the artist to express social criticism in an elegant way. The vibrant, seemingly playful creatures refrain from getting too serious and maintain a suggestive tone that avoids the obvious.

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The stickers are the result of a double-binding process that first assembles man and animal, then adheres the resulting figure to the wall. In the past, Suriani has drawn from his Latin-American heritage, playing with shamanic mythology figures such as toucan or jaguar. In his recent series, on the other hand, he is more interested in urban domestic animals such as cats and dogs—according to the artist, the convention that they tend to resemble their owners offers a metaphoric way to talk about us people. Recently Suriani made a series of French “Bulldogs” as a special dedication on London walls, using this breed to cartoon and make fun of some French characteristics. Each dog expresses a different state of mind—humor, spirituality, criticism or beauty.

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Suriani uses the rare technique of hand-painting every poster he sticks on the streets. Making each sticker is the result of a process involving selecting photos from the Internet, cutting them in Photoshop, then screening and painting before cutting the final product. Such repetition lies at the heart of street art practice, which is often based on plastering as many spots as possible, invasion-style.

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When considering the ephemeral fate of the piece of work destined for degradation of the elements, police destruction or theft from passers-by, the time and effort for such little reward seems remarkable. Suriani explains, however, that the fleeting nature of his work is freeing and allows him to be audacious with both subject and technique. To him, because there is no pressure or constraint, that achievement is rarely a failure.

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In the end, the piece of art is not the only sticker by itself, it is the sticker in its context, seen as a whole on the wall with the daylight shining on it, the motorbikes parked against it or the branch of a tree creeping across. Rarely is the work’s time spent on the wall its only life, after all, with the rise of dedicated photographers immortalizing the scenes for the Internet.

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Suriani claims his intention to step into the city’s landscape by bringing much-needed beauty comes with a positive message. Rather than being aggressive or controversial, Suriani takes pleasure in having people on the street enjoy his figures. His work is bound to the city—physically, geographically and socially—compelling the public to refresh their view of their surroundings and drawing their eyes to the places that typically go unnoticed. As an architect, Suriani has found a way to unveil the city and change people’s perception of the scenes they see everyday without truly seeing them. The choice of venue is very important, based on aesthetic consideration with attention to the context and surroundings like the location.

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Hailing from Brazil, home to a strong and lively street-art culture, Suriani’s passion makes sense. In his native Sao Paolo, a young city constantly changing and under construction, street art is welcome and considered as a positive contribution to embellish the city. Far from being forbidden, stickers can last as long as two years years. There, the practice is often connected to a more political involvement such as a protest against real estate speculation or to support immigration, and Suriani has brought a bit of this spirit to France, where he participated in a campaign by the French Aids support league Act Up as part of a collective huge fresco.

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In fact, Suriani reflects on his practice as a means to get to know Paris and socialize within the community when he moved from Brazil—one bound by a lifestyle of taking risks, celebrating fragile achievements and maintaining that cherished sense of freedom. The community has certain rules about never judging the quality of others’ work and paying the proper respect to the established know-how. Contrary to Brazil where street art involves only young artists, in France people from all ages work on the walls. While collective projects sometimes happen when a whole group invades a venue, one-to-one interactions are more common. Stickers posted in response to others have been known to spark a friendly dialog and lead to real-life meetings.

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As for the transgressive aspect of the street stickering, Suriani sees it more like a tricky game, avoiding the police and trying not to get caught—even though he always works during the day, his favorite being Sunday. He also notes the difference between temporary, removable stickers and permanent paintings on walls and surfaces. For Suriani, the key to street art is freedom—no diploma is needed, anybody is welcome to participate regardless of means or resources, and artists are at liberty to experiment and constantly change their style.

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The idea of presenting a gallery, then, presents that paradox. But, Suriani explains, in the end it’s not about street art in a gallery. Having been painting, drawing and cutting since he was a child, he brings his authentic artistic process to this show. A mix of original and existing pieces, the series simply presents the language of street art in a different venue.


Cool Hunting Video Presents: Faena Arts Center

A look at the current exhibition at Argentina’s newest space for contemporary art

For our latest video we took a trip down to Buenos Aires to see the second exhibition of the new Faena Arts Center. We spoke with the center’s executive director, Ximena Caminos, about the need for freedom in art, the opportunities the center has with their newly space, and the desire they have to promote both established and emerging Argentinian artists.


The Breathless Zoo

The eccentric art of taxidermy explored in a new book
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Taxidermy has risen in the contemporary design scene over recent years, mounted on the walls of shops and restaurants as well as defining a certain throwback aesthetic in modern homes. The venerable form of animal preservation marries actual scientific study with an undeniably eccentric sensibility that has endured across generations, though not everyone decorating with a bust might be fully versed in the origins of the craft. Rachel Poliquin’s “The Breathless Zoo: Taxidermy and The Cultures of Longing” delves into that rich history, exploring the motivations behind the art of taxidermy across cultures and centuries.

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Taxidermy, says Poliquin, poses creatures in such a way that presents the “irresolvable tension” of “animal or object” that characterizes the art. One particularly definitive example comes from the 2004 exhibition “Nanoq: Flat Out and Bluesom” at Spike Island in Bristol, England. The author begins the introduction by describing the show as a culmination of Bryndís Snæbjörnsdóttir and Mark Wilson’s three-year quest to photograph every single mounted polar bear in the UK. The event showcased 10 taxidermic polar bears in a set of glass cases, after, Poliquin writes, they had been “taken from their native landscapes at some stage of life or death and manhandled into everlasting postures.”

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The uneasiness of such an aberrant display of specimens is a function of taxidermy itself. Poliquin ventures to outline the many reasons for the motivation to taxidermy species, from science and fashion to a showcase of virility. Poliquin offers “seven incentives—what I call narratives of longing—that impel the creation of taxidermy: wonder, beauty, spectacle, order, narrative, allegory, and remembrance…As the very word longing suggests, fulfillment is always just beyond reach.”

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Each chapter of “The Breathless Zoo” is devoted to one of these longings and provides historical origins with a fascinating variety of photographs of taxidermic animals. The chapter focusing on “spectacle” as motivation covers Henri Rousseau‘s famous jungle and savage lion attack paintings, which were modeled after taxidermic displays, and continues to explain the anatomical and cultural aspects of the taxidermic lion. Poliquin’s book searches to find and explain truths about an ancient and continuing art that transcends time and place.

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“The Breathless Zoo” is expected to be published 17 August—other taxidermy galleries and resources are available on Poliquin’s website.