
Ever Since The Creation Of The World's First Botanical And Zoological Gardens Five Thousand Years Ago, People Have Collected, Displayed, And Depicted Plants And Animals From Lands Beyond Their Everyday Experience. Some Did So To Demonstrate Power Over Distant Territories, Others To Enhance Prestige By Possessing Something No One Had Seen Before. Exotica Also Satisfied Intellectual Curiosity, Furthered Scientific Research, And Educated And Entertained. In Addition, Exotica, Especially Their State-sponsored Representation, Were Often Instruments Of Political Persuasion, And In Turn Exerted Considerable Influence Over Expansionist Policies. More Than An Account Of Gardens And Menageries From Antiquity To The Present, Strange And Wonderful Explores The Imagery Of Exotic Flora And Fauna In Western Art, Seeking Answers To Certain Fundamental And Universal Questions. How Do Artists, Schooled In Traditional Modes Of Rendering The Familiar, Deal With The New And Strange? Why Are Rare Species Deliberately Introduced Into Images Otherwise Devoid Of The Unusual? What Is The Pictorialized Relationship Between Exotic Reality And Artistic Imagination? Karen Polinger Foster Takes Readers On A Journey Across Millennia And Around The Globe, Telling Fascinating Stories And Meeting Along The Way Such Characters As Hatshepsut's Baboons, Charlemagne's Elephant, Dürer's Rhinoceros, And Victoria's Hippopotamus. What Emerges Is A Sense Of Just How Strong And Far-reaching The Pull Of The Unknown And Exotic Has Been Across Time And Space. Ultimately, Images Of The Wonderful Reveal As Much About The Indigenous As They Do About The Strange, Enabling Us To Glimpse More Vividly The Power Of Imagination To Mold The Unknown To Its Purposes. This Dazzling And Richly Illustrated Volume Offers A Thoughtful, Much-needed Inquiry Into A Very Human Phenomenon.
This book investigates the historical intersection of human curiosity, political power, and the artistic representation of exotic flora and fauna over the last five millennia. Karen Polinger Foster, an expert in ancient art and archaeology, examines how the collection and depiction of non-native species have served as instruments of prestige, scientific inquiry, and political persuasion. The text argues that the pictorialization of the 'strange' reveals as much about the observer's indigenous culture and imagination as it does about the subjects themselves.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and readers frequently note the interdisciplinary nature of this work, which bridges the gap between art history and the history of science. Experts highlight the text as a valuable resource for understanding how visual culture has historically shaped human perceptions of the natural world.
Page Count:
232
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190672544
ISBN-13:
9780190672546
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