Enfilade

Exhibition | Shells: Magic and Science

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on February 23, 2014

From the MIA:

Shells: Magic and Science
Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 23 November 2013 — 8 June 2014

eorge Wolfgang Knorr German, 1705-1761 Plate B. II., from “Deliciae Naturae Selectae,” 1750-1772 Etching, hand-colored The Minnich Collection, The Ethel Morrison Van Derlip Fund P.19,046

George Wolfgang Knorr, Plate B. II., from Deliciae Naturae Selectae, 1750–72, etching, hand-colored.

Shells are common yet precious, abundant yet desirable—among the first things a child instinctively collects. From prehistoric shacks to the courts of Baroque Europe, their translucent texture and fantastical forms have been integrated into everyday objects, decoration, and an incredible variety of art. They are also as central to modern studies of the natural world as the discovery of new lands, their perfection embodying—and ultimately resolving—the dilemma of creation and evolution. This importance is reflecting in the mania for shell collecting, particularly during the late 16th and early 17th centuries when nautilus and conches were mounted in precious metals, adorned with gems, and displayed in magnificent Wunderkammern—the “wonder rooms” or “cabinets of curiosities.”

This exhibition encompasses our passion for shells throughout the ages, gathering treasures from such Twin Cities institutions as the Wangensteen Historical Library, the James Ford Bell Library, the Bell Museum of Natural History, and the MIA itself. Together, they comprise an intriguing patrimony
of prints and precious antique books on natural history, while testifying to
the still-burning fever of shell-collecting.

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