SAN DIEGO, CA.- Inspired by the San Diego Zoos 100th Anniversary, the
Timken joins six prominent Balboa Park institutions in a collaboration of animal-themed exhibitions for 2016.
The Timkens exhibition, Blessed Beasts and Curious Creatures: Animal Processionals from the 13th to the 21st Centuries, runs September 23 through December 11, 2016 and examines humanitys changing relationship with animals, nature, and the world through Western art.
"The project grew out of a collaborative desire to join in and celebrate the Zoo's 100th anniversary. With partners, The J. Paul Getty Museum and the University of San Diego, and the cooperation of artist Kiki Smith, we have the chance to study some compelling depictions of the animal kingdom, said Timken Curatorial Director Derrick R. Cartwright, PhD.
Two of the objects in the exhibition, Jan Brueghel the elders The Entry of Animals into Noahs Ark and a Medieval bestiary are on loan from The J. Paul Getty Museum. Both museums showcase many of the same artists, frequently loan each other works of art, have guest speakers and travel trips.
From biblical treatments in Medieval bestiaries, to late Renaissance treatments of Noah's ark, to scientific treatises from the Enlightenment, to contemporary views based in modern fiction, this focused exhibition offers an opportunity to think deeply about the ways in which the zoological world has been explained differently over time. Taken together, the works are dazzling and this will be a show that visitors young and old will enjoy, said Cartwright.
This fascinating exhibition offers a view of the creation and presentation of visual art portraying animals with the intent to stretch the viewers perception of the changing relationship humans have with animals, nature and the world.
A 13-century English Medieval bestiary manuscript, Jan Brueghel the elders brilliant rare composition, The Entry Of The Animals Into Noah's Ark, and a large-scale contemporary print by artist Kiki Smith, Pool of Tears 2 (after Lewis Carroll), will complete the exhibition.
In our unique role as the jewel box of fine art in San Diego and one of the finest small museums in the world, the Timken is perfectly positioned to partner with the world-renowned San Diego Zoo as it celebrates its centennial anniversary, stated Megan Pogue, executive director of the Timken Museum of Art. We offer our congratulations to the San Diego Zoo, and we welcome all of the Zoos well-wishers to the Timken to further experience how animals enrich the planet and immeasurably add to our humanity.
The progression through time starts with the 13-century English bestiary, which illustrates real and imaginary animals intended to provide readers with moral lessons.
Bestiaries were a kind of Medieval encyclopedia; they explored the world of animals primarily to explain their significance within the worldview. Executed in the colored drawing style that is part of England's distinctive contribution to history of art, each animal has a unique and colorful story depicted in lively and animated terms.
Jan Brueghel the elders painting of The Entry Of The Animals Into Noah's Ark is a paradise landscape that depicts Renaissance zoology, religious views on nature and the culture of collecting and cataloguing animals. The painting features an abundance of animals filling the earth and sky. As they fight, play, fly, and swim, Noah shepherds them toward the ark in the distance.
Appointed as court painter in 1609 to Archduke Albert and the Infanta Isabella, Brueghel studied and drew many of these creatures as live subjects. The discovery of the New World in the 1600s inspired curiosity about natural history and this interest led many European rulers to form menageries of rare live animals.