This article considers the practice of taxidermy and its relationship to the ‘golden age’ of big game hunting, the science of natural history and the dramaturgical codes of empire by looking at the collecting exploits of one man, Major Percy Powell-Cotton (1866–1940), and his attempts to preserve the spoils of the hunt in the ‘great indoors’. As various scholars have pointed out, taxidermy offers up a vivid and striking ‘afterlife’ of the animal with a unique (and some might say unsavoury) ability to elucidate our environmental and cultural relations with other species. As such, the reanimated animals of empire, posed on the walls of the country estate or arrested in museum cases, represent valuable historical artefacts ripe for unstitching...
This article argues that the work of contemporary American artist Walton Ford stages the paradoxical...
In 1776, the first living giant anteater to reach Europe arrived in Madrid from Buenos Aires. It sur...
The abundant anthropological and historical evidence for animal-based medicine, or zootherapy, sugge...
This article explores taxidermy as an interesting example of human-animal relations through a study ...
This refereed journal article was commissioned by the editor Barbara Gates following an abstract in ...
Focusing on taxidermy in contemporary museums and art galleries, my paper explores relationships bet...
Taxidermy is the process of making a life-like sculpture of an animal from its own skin. To make an ...
This paper considers the influence of the museum space on its taxidermy collections as their own het...
How did taxidermy develop, and how was it taught before the appearance of nineteenth-century handboo...
Current artists who engage with the historical traditions of taxidermy are producing works that comm...
An artist and a geographer asked the same question: what is a zoological specimen and how can it be ...
What role do museums play in elevating the Sixth Mass Extinction Event within public consciousness? ...
Taxidermy made for display is often considered less significant in museum research collections. This...
Elephants were vital agents of empire. In British Burma their unique abilities made them essential w...
Elephants were vital agents of empire. In British Burma their unique abilities made them essential w...
This article argues that the work of contemporary American artist Walton Ford stages the paradoxical...
In 1776, the first living giant anteater to reach Europe arrived in Madrid from Buenos Aires. It sur...
The abundant anthropological and historical evidence for animal-based medicine, or zootherapy, sugge...
This article explores taxidermy as an interesting example of human-animal relations through a study ...
This refereed journal article was commissioned by the editor Barbara Gates following an abstract in ...
Focusing on taxidermy in contemporary museums and art galleries, my paper explores relationships bet...
Taxidermy is the process of making a life-like sculpture of an animal from its own skin. To make an ...
This paper considers the influence of the museum space on its taxidermy collections as their own het...
How did taxidermy develop, and how was it taught before the appearance of nineteenth-century handboo...
Current artists who engage with the historical traditions of taxidermy are producing works that comm...
An artist and a geographer asked the same question: what is a zoological specimen and how can it be ...
What role do museums play in elevating the Sixth Mass Extinction Event within public consciousness? ...
Taxidermy made for display is often considered less significant in museum research collections. This...
Elephants were vital agents of empire. In British Burma their unique abilities made them essential w...
Elephants were vital agents of empire. In British Burma their unique abilities made them essential w...
This article argues that the work of contemporary American artist Walton Ford stages the paradoxical...
In 1776, the first living giant anteater to reach Europe arrived in Madrid from Buenos Aires. It sur...
The abundant anthropological and historical evidence for animal-based medicine, or zootherapy, sugge...