This lecture will consider the role of animals in early modern landscape design. Particular attention will be paid to the representation of real and invented animals within the Renaissance garden.
LUKE MORGAN is Associate Professor of Art History & Theory at Monash University. His books include The Monster in the Garden: The Grotesque the Gigantic in Renaissance Landscape Design (2015) and Nature as Model: Salomon de Caus and Early Seventeenth-Century Landscape Design (2007), both published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.
His current research, which focuses on the theme of enchantment in early modern landscape experience, is funded by the Australian Research Council. His most recent lecture at The Johnston Collection was NATURE AS MODEL: The Italian Renaissance Garden (2016).
The PRETTY WILD Study Series will reflect on the themes explored in ANIMAL KINGDOM (13 June 2017 -19 September 2017) exhibition-house tour. We know that all the speakers offer wonderful insights through their individual knowledge whilst exploring the artistic, social, and cultural worlds where a menagerie of art, fashion, interiors and design and animals meet.
image: figures of the ‘Lions’ in the Sacro Bosco (Sacred Grove), colloquially Parco dei Mostri (Park of the Monsters) or the Garden of Bomarzo, Bomarzo, Italy, late 16th century, image supplied.
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