Showing posts with label anthropomorphic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anthropomorphic. Show all posts

Monday, September 23, 2013

Walter Potter's Anthropomorphic Taxidermy on BBC Radio 4's Today Program with Pat Morris and Polly Morgan


If you are interested in a wonderful (if brief!) discussion on BBC Radio 4's Today Program about anthropomorphic taxidermy with sculptor Polly Morgan and Walter Potter's Curious World of Taxidermy co-author Pat Morris, click here and then scroll in about 2:50. Above is a photo of the two in the studios, drawn from the BBC's Twiter Feed, wherein Pat holds Walter Potter's first taxidermied canary, and Polly, a copy of the book.

You can purchase your own copy of the book--which is cloth bound, 128 pages, and contains over 100 full color images, many never before published--by clicking here (for UK orders) or here (for US); International buyers please email morbidanatomy [at] gmail.com.

To visit our new Walter Potter website, featuring a blog with guest posts by a variety of Potter enthusiasts, click here. If you would like to contribute a post, please email walterpottertaxidermy [at] gmail.com.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

"Walter Potter and his Curious World of Taxidermy" New Book and Website!

As regular readers of this blog will already know, Walter Potter was a self-taught Victorian county taxidermist of no great expertise who delighted generations with quirky tableaux peopled by tea-drinking kittens, arithmetic-doing rabbits, cigar smoking squirrels and gambling rats. His collection was on view for nearly 150 years before, tragically, being divided at auction ten years ago this month.

The new book Walter Potter's Curious World of Taxidermy, by Dr. Pat Morris with Morbid Anatomy's Joanna Ebenstein, brings this collection back together--if virtually--with informative text, dozens of new photos of the best loved tableaux, and a new introduction by legendary pop artist (and Potter collector!) Sir Peter Blake.

Sixty (!!!) copies of the book have just arrived at The Morbid Anatomy Library (see above), and are ready to go to good homes across America. Books will ship early next week; you can purchase a copy (or 3!) by clicking here, or stop by the library during open hours (Saturdays 2-6) to pick up a copy and save yourself the shipping/handling fee.

We have also launched a website to go with the book, featuring a blog with guest posts by a variety of Potter enthusiasts; click here to check it out. If you would like to contribute, please email walterpottertaxidermy [at] gmail.com.


You can find out more about the book in the trailer above and by clicking here.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

"Walter Potter's Curious World of Taxidermy" : New Book Trailer by The Midnight Archive's Ronni Thomas and Pre-Order Information!


I am so excited to share with you this new book trailer for Walter Potter's Curious World of Taxidermy, by Dr. Pat Morris with Joanna Ebenstein, and a foreword by pop art legend Sir Peter Blake. The trailer is the work of Ronni Thomas, the mastermind behind the online series The Midnight Archive, and includes footage from his forthcoming film "Where Kittens Wed and Birds Lament: The Curious Creations of Walter Potter."

You can pre-order the book--which will be officially released on September 19th--in the UK by clicking here, and in the US by clicking here. Also, hope to see you at one of our terrific UK launch events; for those in the New York area, stay tuned for news of a book party closer to home.

 More about the book, from the official copy:

Walter Potter's Curious World of Taxidermy
By Dr Pat Morris with Joanna Ebenstein
Foreword by Sir Peter Blake (Constable and Robinson, 2013)
Enter Victorian taxidermist Walter Potter's fantasy world of rabbit schoolchildren, cigar-smoking squirrels and exemplary feline etiquette at the kittens' tea party...

Walter Potter (1835-1918), a country taxidermist of no great expertise, became famous as an icon of Victorian whimsy. His tiny museum in Bramber, Sussex, was crammed full of multi-legged kittens, two-headed lambs and a bewildering assortment of curios.
Closed in the '70s, the museum was variously re-established before being auctioned off in 2003. It was reported that a £1M bid by Damien Hirst to keep the collection intact was refused, but in 2010 many of Potter's key pieces were exhibited by the artist Sir Peter Blake at London's 'Museum of Everything', attracting over 30,000 visitors in 6 weeks. The subsequent dispersal of Potter's works has meant the loss of a truly unique Victorian legacy. Here, perhaps for the last time, the collection is preserved and celebrated with new photographs of Potter's best-loved works.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Seeking Pieces from Victorian Anthropomorphic Taxidermist Walter Potter's Now Divided "Museum of Curiosities"

We here at Morbid Anatomy have been hard at work of late in our attempts to track down as many pieces as possible from Victorian anthropomorphic taxidermist Walter Potter's now sadly divided up Museum of Curiosities. Many of these pieces were brought back together for the wonderful 2012 Museum of Everything exhibition, but a great deal more have never been seen since the Bonhams auction which dispersed them in 2003.

Which brings me to my plea: If any of you lovely Morbid Anatomy readers out there happen to own any of pieces from this collection, or have any ideas as to where others might reside, we would be so very grateful if you would drop us a line at morbidanatomy [at] gmail.com and let us know.

All images above, of tableaux by Walter Potter, are drawn from the Bohnams auction site; you can view more images, and the entire auction catalog, by clicking here.

Walter Potter Tableaux, top to bottom:
  1. Lot 293, The Walter Potter Tableau, "The Kittens' Wedding", English, 1890
  2. Lot 498, The Walter Potter Tableau, "The Kittens Tea and Croquet Party", English, late 19th century
  3. Lot 445, The Walter Potter Tableau "Rabbits' Village School", English, late 19th century
  4. Lot 13, Walter Potter's First Tableau ' The Death and Burial of Cock Robin' English, circa 1861
  5. Lot 55, A Walter Potter Tableaux 'The Happy Family' English, circa 1870 

Friday, March 23, 2012

Sue Jeiven's Anthromorphic Mouse Taxidermy Class, Valentine's Day Edition






Above are some photos from the recent Valentine's Day edition of our most popular and most often sold out of Observatory class, Anthropomorphic Mouse Taxidermy Class with Susan Jeiven. Sue was recently profiled by the Spanish Television network Telemundo in a piece entitled "Pasatiempos controversial: Disecan animales muertos para decorar;" you can view it in its entirety by clicking here.

For those interested in studying with Sue, in making your own pieces and learning this largely lost Victorian art: I am pleased to announce a few rare vacancies in some upcoming classes; click here to find out more. Click on images to see larger versions; you can also see more photos from past classes by clicking here.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Observatory's Anthropomorphic Taxidermy Class with Sue Jeiven in the International News!






The one-day workshop, which teaches students how to stuff dead mice and pose them up as if they were humans, is becoming a popular pastime in New York.

White-haired mice styled in tutus and polka dot hair bows; their spindly paws strumming miniature guitars - even reading the New York Times - were photographed in Ms Jeiven's class

An educator and tattoo artist, [Sue Jeiven] begins the four-hour lesson handing out the lifeless little creatures, having sucked out their blood with a syringe beforehand. A statement on the class website warns only feeder mice are used for the arts and crafts session.

But strange or morbid as it might seem to some, anthropomorphic taxidermy – the practice of mounting and displaying taxidermied animals as if they were humans or engaged in human activities – has a long and storied history, beginning with the most privileged classes.

It was a popular art form during the Victorian and Edwardian eras; the best known practitioner of the art form being British taxidermist Walter Potter, whose works included The Kitten Wedding and The Kitten Tea Party, which the mind immediately wants to imagine.

--"Is this the most bizarre art project ever? Taxidermy class teaches students how to stuff dead mice and pose them up 'as if they were humans'" Jennifer Madison, The Daily Mail

For anyone looking for that extra-authentic flavour to their fireplace display, Susan Jeiven's anthropomorphic taxidermy class might just the class you're looking for.

At the Morbid Academy, as Jeiven calls it, about 20 students learn to transform the bodies of dead white mice into human-like pantomimes.
In one example, a white mouse holds a miniature classical guitar. In another, a mouse wearing a pink bow on its head reads a tiny facsimile of the New York Times.

--"Would you buy or make dead mouse art?" Canadian Broadcasting Corporation News

There are mice and men and, thanks to a macabre hobby, there are also mice that look like men.

Bent over tables in a room in an industrial corner of Brooklyn, about 20 New Yorkers use scalpels to slice into dead white mice, the first step in the animals’ unlikely journey toward an afterlife spent in human poses and dolls’ clothing.

Anthropomorphic taxidermy is an art form that became hugely popular in Britain in the 19th century, with Queen Victoria herself a fan. Now, as with many odd activities, it has found new life in Brooklyn.

“It’s a little immortality,” instructor Susan Jeiven, 40, explains at the start of her latest sold-out class.

--"Morbid Anatomy 101: Macabre hobby gives dead animals new life" Sebastian Smith, Ottawa Citizen
Congratulations to Sue Jeiven--our amazing anthropomorphic taxidermy teacher--for the recent flurry of international press surrounding her oft-sold out class excerpted above. You can read the whole Daily Mail article--from which all of the images and first excerpt above are drawn--by clicking here, the CBC News article by clicking here, and the Ottawa Citizen article by clicking here.

I am also very pleased to announce that we just added five new classes to our roster, and four of those still have vacancies. If you are interested in learning more--or better yet, signing up for one of Sue's incredible classes--click here. To find out more about the "Morbid Academy" Sue refers to (we call it The Morbid Anatomy Art Academy), click here. To watch a short video about Sue and her work, click here.

All images from the Daily Mail Article; ©AFP/Getty Images.