The Digital Ark: Early Modern Collections of Curiosities in England and Scotland, 1580-1700

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The Work of Verbal Picturing for John Ray and Some of his Contemporaries

Secondary Title (i.e. Proceedings Title): Periodical Title:Intellectual History Review Publication Type: Authors:Wragge-Morley, Alexander Editors: Publisher: Place of Publication: Publication Date:Mar 2010 Alternate Date (i.e. Conference Date): Volume:20 Issue:1 Start Page:165 End Page:179 Abstract: By far the largest part of Nehemiah Grew's account of a seventeenth-century collection of rarities, his Musæum Regalis Societatis (1685) is taken up with 'thick', verbal descriptions of things in the Royal Society's repository. Not only, Grew suggests, do his descriptions serve to signify the contents of his collection, but they enable us to discern among species and to think about the collection's pieces in new ways. Verbal descriptions did not just signify things in the Royal Society's collection, but had the capacity to alter their meanings. The essay discusses the 'picturing' of natural things in Early Modern Europe with little direct reference to the contemporary media of graphic representation - drawings, engravings, paintings etc. - in order to highlight the role of the then most widely used, but now least discussed of these media, verbal descriptions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] Descriptors/Keywords: Cabinets of curiosities
Collectors & collecting -- History
Art -- Collectors & collecting
Essay (Literary form)
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Documents in Print Item: No Documents Listed in Print Item Attached People: Subject of/in a work of art - Grew, Nehemiah (1641-1712)
Subject of/in a work of art - Ray, John (1627-1705)
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