Libby Robin on Anthropocene Cabinets of Curiosity at ANU

Boat on shore

17 Sep Libby Robin on Anthropocene Cabinets of Curiosity at ANU

Boat on shore

Anthropocene Cabinets of Curiosity: Objects of Strange Change
Libby Robin (Fenner School of Environment and Society, ANU and National Museum of Australia)

Humanities Research Centre Seminar: HRC Conference Room, Top Floor, A.D Hope Building #14, ANU

Tuesday 29 September 2015 4-5.30 pm

In today’s museums and artworks, in digital and other public spaces, we are seeing again the ‘cabinets of curiosities’ that used to a mark of public culture in the 1500s. Some, but not all are presented as formal cabinets, like the Wunderkammer of the pre-Enlightenment era. What is the significance of curious objects for artists and curators working to explore the Anthropocene moment? Cabinets of curiosities celebrate objects, but they are also display connections, and juxtapositions. The ‘curious’ is in both. They often reflect both the unlikeliness of nature’s creations, and of their (dis)location in a well-furnished interior space. This paper unpacks some of these cabinet installations, reflecting on the role of juxtaposing unlikely objects as a response to the strange changes of the Anthropocene.

No Comments

Post A Comment