What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space

For the first half of the nineteenth century, objects in the British Museum were largely unlabeled, uncatalogued, and unexplained. Nevertheless, the idea that the object could evoke a ‘larger world’ was current in discussions of the pedagogical use of the museum. The popular understanding of the mus...

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Main Authors: Jordan Kistler, Will Tattersdill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Leicester 2019-11-01
Series:Museum & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/3219
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spelling doaj-f3eb5b7c888d40bda8d4a21263ad79402020-11-25T03:04:02ZengUniversity of LeicesterMuseum & Society1479-83602019-11-0117337738910.29311/mas.v17i3.32192895What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum spaceJordan Kistler0Will Tattersdill1University of StrathclydeUniversity of BirminghamFor the first half of the nineteenth century, objects in the British Museum were largely unlabeled, uncatalogued, and unexplained. Nevertheless, the idea that the object could evoke a ‘larger world’ was current in discussions of the pedagogical use of the museum. The popular understanding of the museum as a place of education foregrounded the idea that engagement with the thing itself, rather than any wider context or paratext, was enough to allow access to an object’s ‘realm of significance’ (Bennett, 1994), which was figured as Absolute Truth in Kantian terms embedded within each museum object. The fantasy of knowledge that could be gained from a mere glimpse reached its heights in the feats of identification and reconstruction performed by naturalists of the period like Georges Cuvier or Richard Owen. It encouraged the conception of the museum encounter as an act of instantaneous imaginative reconstruction, in which the fragmentary or uncontextualized part could be reassembled into an ideal, accurate whole. This attitude can still be seen in today’s responses to palaeoart, a discipline heavily associated with the experience of natural history museums which proposes to evoke a world to which its practitioners have only very partial access. With dinosaur palaeoart as its chief case study, thinking in particular about Owen and Waterhouse Hawkins's famous Crystal Palace dinosaurs (1854) and Ann Coates's rather less famous children's book about them (1970), this essay stresses the tenuous relationship between interpretation and reality. It argues that the universal truth implicitly promised by the museum encounter is deceptive, but also that there is a virtue in acknowledging the creativity which underpins these impressions of a world beyond the self.https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/3219dinosaursimaginative reconstructionreconstructionresonance and wonderaesthetic gazemuseum labellingpalaeontologycrystal palace dinosaurswalter paterann coatesjohn vernon lordwaterhouse hawkinshenry rider haggardrichard owen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jordan Kistler
Will Tattersdill
spellingShingle Jordan Kistler
Will Tattersdill
What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space
Museum & Society
dinosaurs
imaginative reconstruction
reconstruction
resonance and wonder
aesthetic gaze
museum labelling
palaeontology
crystal palace dinosaurs
walter pater
ann coates
john vernon lord
waterhouse hawkins
henry rider haggard
richard owen
author_facet Jordan Kistler
Will Tattersdill
author_sort Jordan Kistler
title What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space
title_short What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space
title_full What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space
title_fullStr What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space
title_full_unstemmed What’s your dinosaur? Or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space
title_sort what’s your dinosaur? or, imaginative reconstruction and absolute truth in the museum space
publisher University of Leicester
series Museum & Society
issn 1479-8360
publishDate 2019-11-01
description For the first half of the nineteenth century, objects in the British Museum were largely unlabeled, uncatalogued, and unexplained. Nevertheless, the idea that the object could evoke a ‘larger world’ was current in discussions of the pedagogical use of the museum. The popular understanding of the museum as a place of education foregrounded the idea that engagement with the thing itself, rather than any wider context or paratext, was enough to allow access to an object’s ‘realm of significance’ (Bennett, 1994), which was figured as Absolute Truth in Kantian terms embedded within each museum object. The fantasy of knowledge that could be gained from a mere glimpse reached its heights in the feats of identification and reconstruction performed by naturalists of the period like Georges Cuvier or Richard Owen. It encouraged the conception of the museum encounter as an act of instantaneous imaginative reconstruction, in which the fragmentary or uncontextualized part could be reassembled into an ideal, accurate whole. This attitude can still be seen in today’s responses to palaeoart, a discipline heavily associated with the experience of natural history museums which proposes to evoke a world to which its practitioners have only very partial access. With dinosaur palaeoart as its chief case study, thinking in particular about Owen and Waterhouse Hawkins's famous Crystal Palace dinosaurs (1854) and Ann Coates's rather less famous children's book about them (1970), this essay stresses the tenuous relationship between interpretation and reality. It argues that the universal truth implicitly promised by the museum encounter is deceptive, but also that there is a virtue in acknowledging the creativity which underpins these impressions of a world beyond the self.
topic dinosaurs
imaginative reconstruction
reconstruction
resonance and wonder
aesthetic gaze
museum labelling
palaeontology
crystal palace dinosaurs
walter pater
ann coates
john vernon lord
waterhouse hawkins
henry rider haggard
richard owen
url https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/3219
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