Catawiki is continuously updating its technology. You are currently using an outdated browser. To optimise your browsing experience, please update your browser.
You can set your cookie preferences using the toggles below. You can update your preferences, withdraw your consent at any time, and see a detailed description of the types of cookies we and our partners use in our Cookie Policy.
Written by David Leggett | Last updated 23rd July 2018
When we think of taxidermy, we might think of hunter’s cabins or creepy houses with a collection of dusty trophy heads hanging on the wall. But there is so much more! For the last century or so, creative taxidermists inspired by Greek Mythology and stories such as 'Alice in Wonderland', have decided to bring fantastical creatures to life using a mix of skins and feathers from various animals. Let’s have a look in our cabinet of curiosities for some of the most interesting creatures created and the stories behind them.
Monkey or mermaid?
For centuries, the legend of the mermaid has kept explorers of the sea vigilant in the hope of capturing this mythical creature. Barnum’s travelling circus introduced the Fiji Mermaid to the world: half-fish, half-monkey. Fishermen in Japan and the East Indies had long constructed these 'hybrids' by stitching the upper bodies of apes onto the bodies of fish, which were occasionally used for religious purposes. An American sea captain called Samuel Barrett Edes bought the 'mermaid' from Japanese sailors in 1822, and about 20 years later it ended up in Barnum’s travelling circus. It was so popular that others started copying it. Slowly, it became a staple in many cabinets of curiosities. Even though it looks like an obvious hoax, which is always easy to say in hindsight, a lot of people were fooled, no doubt adding to the mermaid mythology. This is an early example of chimaera taxidermy - a form of taxidermy making use of different animals and materials.
A Fiji mermaid from scratch made by Jacob Petersson
Animal appliances
A mounted bear standing upright in your house that also doubles as a table? It may seem strange, but in the Victorian era, practical or decorative items made from animal parts were very fashionable. Rowland Ward was a world renowned taxidermist in Victorian Great Britain and was the founder of the firm Rowland Ward Limited of Piccadilly, London. The shop was famously known as 'The Jungle'. It was widely acclaimed for its taxidermy work on birds and big-game trophies, but also made a lot of practical and fashionable items from antlers, feet, skins, feathers and tusks. These items included a 'dumbwaiter' - a standing bear, holding a tray on which drinks could be placed, stuffed birds as lamp stands and liquor cabinets made from elephant’s feet. Ward also created a number of chimaeras, which is the name for any mythical or fictional animal with parts taken from various animals.
Left: example of a dumbwaiter | Right: Roland Ward
Taxidermy gone rogue
In 2005, New York artist Sarina Brewer started a new pop-surrealist art genre, called 'Rogue Taxidermy'. It marked a significant resurgence in the USA not just of taxidermy in general, but also of chimaera taxidermy. Rogue taxidermy is an art genre characterised by mixed media sculptures containing conventional taxidermy-related materials that are used in an unconventional manner. This doesn’t mean there must be animal components in the sculpture, for there are a lot of materials such as faux fur that also constitute taxidermy-related. One of the sculptures of Sarina Brewer, 'Obsidian', is a modern take on the Griffon from Alice in Wonderland: half-vulture, half-cat.
'Obsidian' by Sarina Brewer
Another modern taxidermy artist is Enrique Gomez de Molina, based in Miami. By creating beautiful, yet disturbing collages of animal parts, he wants to raise awareness of the dangers faced by multitudes of species through nuclear and chemical waste, deforestation and human invasion. Taking it a step further, Brooklyn-based artist Kate Clark adds human-like faces to animal bodies, exploring the overlap that exists across our cultures and within our histories - to investigate not only the characteristics that separate us from the animal kingdom, but more importantly, those which unite us.
Left: Enrique Gomez de Molina | Right: Kate Clark
____________________
At Catawiki’s Cabinet of Curiosities Taxidermy auction, similar creations have previously been sold. Keep an eye on the Taxidermy & Mounted Animals auction held towards the end of every month for all of these weird and wonderful creatures.
Discover more taxidermy | skull | fossil
You might also like these articles: