Artistic and Scientific Taxidermy and Modelling - A Manual of Instruction in the Methods of Preserving and Reproducing the Correct Form of All Natural Objects, Including a Chapter on the Modelling of Foliage
275 pages
English

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Artistic and Scientific Taxidermy and Modelling - A Manual of Instruction in the Methods of Preserving and Reproducing the Correct Form of All Natural Objects, Including a Chapter on the Modelling of Foliage , livre ebook

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275 pages
English

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Description

This early work on the art of taxidermy, Montagu Browne, was originally published in 1896. It is designed as an instructive manual on the various methods and processes involved in taxidermy, and includes chapters such as 'The Tools Used in Taxidermy and Modelling', 'The Collecting of Mammals, Birds, and Other Vertebrates, and Invertebrates, by Various Methods', 'The Skinning and Setting-Up of Birds by Various Methods', 'The Mounting of Animals in an Artistic Manner', and much more. Accompanied by many illustrations, this is a fantastic read for anyone with an interest in learning the skills of taxidermy. To compliment the republication of this work, a brand new introduction on the history of Taxidermy has been included.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 décembre 2020
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781528766197
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

ARTISTIC AND SCIENTIFIC
TAXIDERMY AND MODELLING
A MANUAL OF INSTRUCTION IN THE METHODS OF PRESERVING AND REPRODUCING THE CORRECT FORM OF ALL NATURAL OBJECTS INCLUDING A CHAPTER ON THE MODELLING OF FOLIAGE
BY
MONTAGU BROWNE, F.G.S., F.Z.S., ETC.
CURATOR OF THE LEICESTER CORPORATION MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY; AUTHOR OF PRACTICAL TAXIDERMY, THE VERTEBRATE ANIMALS OF LEICESTERSHIRE AND RUTLAND, ETC.
WITH 22 FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS AND 11 ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT
1896
Copyright 2013 Read Books Ltd.
This book is copyright and may not be reproduced or copied in any way without the express permission of the publisher in writing
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Taxidermy
Taxidermy (from the Greek for arrangement of skin ) is the art of preparing, stuffing, and mounting the skins of animals (especially vertebrates) for display (e.g. as hunting trophies) or for other sources of study. Taxidermy can be done on all vertebrate species of animals, including mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, and amphibians. A person who practices taxidermy is called a taxidermist. Taxidermists may practice professionally for museums or as businesses, catering to hunters and fishermen, or as amateurs, such as hobbyists, hunters, and fishermen. To practice taxidermy, one should be very familiar with anatomy, sculpture, and painting, as well as tanning.
The preservation of animal skins has been practiced for a long time. Embalmed animals have even been found with Egyptian mummies. Although embalming incorporates the use of lifelike poses, it is not technically considered taxidermy though. The earliest methods of preservation of birds for natural history cabinets were published in 1748 by the French Academician R aumur, and four years later, techniques for mounting were described by M. B. Stollas. By the eighteenth century, almost every town had a tannery business. In the nineteenth century, hunters began bringing their trophies to upholstery shops, where the upholsterers would actually sew up the animal skins and stuff them with rags and cotton. The term stuffing or a stuffed animal evolved from this crude form of taxidermy. Professional taxidermists prefer the term mounting to stuffing however. More sophisticated cotton-wrapped wire bodies supporting sewn-on cured skins soon followed.
In France, Louis Dufresne, taxidermist at the Mus um National d Histoire Naturelle from 1793, popularized arsenical soap (utilising the chemical Arsenic) in an article titled, Nouveau Dictionnaire D Histoire Naturelle (1803-1804). This technique enabled the museum to build the greatest collection of birds in the world. Dufresne s methods spread to England in the early nineteenth century, where updated and non-toxic methods of preservation were developed by some of the leading naturalists of the day, including Rowland Ward and Montague Brown. Ward established one of the earliest taxidermy firms, Rowland Ward Ltd. of Piccadilly. Nevertheless, the art of taxidermy remained relatively undeveloped, and the specimens that were created remained stiff and unconvincing.
The golden age of taxidermy was during the Victorian era, when mounted animals became a popular part of interior design and decor. For the Great Exhibition of 1851 in London, John Hancock, widely considered the father of modern taxidermy, mounted a series of stuffed birds as an exhibit. They generated much interest among the public and scientists alike, who considered them superior to earlier models and were regarded as the first lifelike and artistic specimens on display. A judge remarked that Hancock s exhibit will go far towards raising the art of taxidermy to a level with other arts, which have hitherto held higher pretensions.
In the early twentieth century, taxidermy was taken forward under the leadership of artists such as Carl Akeley, James L. Clark, Coleman Jonas, Fredrick and William Kaempfer, and Leon Pray. These and other taxidermists developed anatomically accurate figures which incorporated every detail in artistically interesting poses, with mounts in realistic settings and poses. This was quite a change from the caricatures popularly offered as hunting trophies. The methods of taxidermy have substantially improved over the last century, heightening quality and lowering toxicity. The animal is first skinned in a process similar to removing the skin from a chicken prior to cooking. This can be accomplished without opening the body cavity, so the taxidermist usually does not see internal organs or blood. Depending on the type of skin, preserving chemicals are applied or the skin is tanned. It is then either mounted on a mannequin made from wood, wool and wire, or a polyurethane form. Clay is used to install glass eyes, which are either bought or cast by the taxidermist themselves.
As an interesting side note, with the success of taxidermy has come the sub-genre of rogue taxidermy ; the creation of stuffed animals which do not have real, live counterparts. They can represent impossible hybrids such as the jackalope and the skvader, extinct species, mythical creatures such as dragons, griffins, unicorns or mermaids, or may be entirely of the maker s imagination. When the platypus was first discovered by Europeans in 1798, and a pelt and sketch were sent to the UK, some thought the animal to be a hoax. It was supposed that a taxidermist had sewn a duck s beak onto the body of a beaver-like animal. George Shaw, who produced the first description of the animal in the Naturalist s Shunga Miscellany in 1799, even took a pair of scissors to the dried skin to check for stitches. Today, although a niche craft, the art of taxidermy - rogue or otherwise, is still thriving.


M ODEL OF A RUINED B ELFRY -W INDOW, WITH B ARN -O WL AND Y OUNG.
TO
Sir William henry flower,
K.C.B., D.C.L., LL.D., Sc.D., F.R.S., E TC .,
DIRECTOR OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY),
THIS VOLUME IS,
BY PERMISSION, DEDICATED
AS A TRIBUTE OF GRATEFUL FRIENDSHIP AND ESTEEM, AND IN RECOGNITION OF HIS SYMPATHY WITH ALL WHICH TENDS TO ELEVATE THE ARTS OF TAXIDERMY AND MODELLING, AND THE STATUS OF MUSEUMS GENERALLY.
PREFACE
S OME years have elapsed since the publication of a work from my pen entitled Practical Taxidermy , which, despite its elementary character, has-judging from numberless letters received from all quarters of the globe-been of some service to its readers.
Since that time, the gratifying strides made by taxidermists towards a better understanding of their art, and by museum authorities towards a more scientific exposition of natural objects, have emboldened me to describe methods of taxidermy and modelling not yet published, most of which are, indeed, absolutely novel, and at present confined to the Leicester Museum.
Although many of the processes described are somewhat advanced and necessarily technical, yet, as the old methods of work have been re-described, corrected, and have had new light thrown upon them, the learner is easily led from the known to the unknown, the stages being so defined that he need not be alarmed at the magnitude of the task set him. Moreover, the writer is always ready, as of old, to render any further assistance to his readers if, when they write, a properly addressed envelope for reply be enclosed.
At the outset, it was intended to devote a somewhat lengthy chapter to a consideration of the aims of the scientific museum of the future (contrasted with the past and present), and to a review of all that is noteworthy in the management and arrangement of museums at home and abroad. So much material has accumulated, however, as to forbid its inclusion within the present pages, which are therefore restricted to a description of methods of Taxidermy and Modelling, leaving wider considerations of matters connected with museums to be dealt with in a future work.
MONTAGU BROWNE.
C ORPORATION M USEUM AND A RT G ALLERY , L EICESTER , February 1896.
ERRATUM
Page 46 , line 3, for subsequently, read previously.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
I NTRODUCTION -T HE O RIGIN AND P ROGRESS OF T AXIDERMY
CHAPTER II
T HE T OOLS USED IN T AXIDERMY AND M ODELLING
CHAPTER III
N ARCOTISING, K ILLING, AND P RESERVATIVE F LUIDS -P RESERVATIVE S OAPS , P OWDERS, ETC .-M ODELLING -C OMPOSITIONS , C EMENTS, AND VARIOUS G ENERAL F ORMUL
CHAPTER IV
T HE C OLLECTING OF M AMMALS, B IRDS, AND OTHER V ERTEBRATES, AND I NVERTEBRATES, BY VARIOUS M ETHODS
CHAPTER V
M AMMALS -T HE S KINNING AND S ETTING-UP OF M AMMALS BY ORDINARY M ETHODS ; ALSO THEIR R EPRODUCTION BY C ASTING AND M ODELLING IN P APER, ETC . H ORNED H EADS, THE P REPARATION OF S KELETONS, AND THE T AWING OF S KINS
CHAPTER VI
T HE S KINNING AND S ETTING-UP OF B IRDS BY VARIOUS M ETHODS
CHAPTER VII
T HE T REATMENT OF R EPTILES , A MPHIBIANS, AND F ISHES BY T AXIDERMIC AND OTHER M ETHODS
CHAPTER VIII
M ETHODS OF REPRODUCING VARIOUS S UBJECTS AMONGST THE I NVERTEBRATES
CHAPTER IX
C ASTING AND M ODELLING FROM N ATURAL F OLIAGE , F LOWERS , F RUITS , A LG , F UNGI, ETC., AND THEIR R EPRODUCTION IN PRACTICALLY I NDESTRUCTIBLE M ATERIALS
CHAPTER X
T HE M OUNTING OF A NIMALS IN AN A RTISTIC M ANNER, WITH M ODELLED R OCKWORK , T REES, ETC. , N ATURAL G RASSES , F ERNS , M OSSES , S EAWEEDS, ETC., AND M ODELLED F OLIAGE
B IBLIOGRAPHY OF W ORKS TREATING WHOLLY OR IN PART UPON T AXIDERMY
ILLUSTRATIONS
PRINTED SEPARATELY FROM THE TEXT
1. Model of a ruined belfry-window with barn-owl and young
2. Tools used in taxidermy and modelling
3. Casting from the body of a tiger in plaster of Paris
4. Half models in paper o

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