''For the 2002 novel by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, see
The Cabinet of Curiosities''

"Musei Wormiani Historia", the
frontispiece from the ''Museum Wormianum'' depicting
Ole Worm's cabinet of curiosities.
'Cabinets of curiosities' (also known as 'Wunderkammer' or 'wonder-rooms') were collections of types of objects we now regard as quite separate, but whose boundaries were in the Renaissance yet to be defined. They included specimens we would now categorise as belonging to
natural history (sometimes faked),
geology,
ethnography,
archaeology, religious or historical
relics, works of art, including
cabinet paintings, and antiquities. Some belonged to rulers, aristocrats or merchants, others to early practitioners of
science in
Europe, and were precursors to
museums of different sorts.
The term cabinet originally described a room rather than a piece of furniture. Two of the most famously described 17th century cabinets were those of
Ole Worm (also known as ''Olaus Wormius'') (1588-1654), and
Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680). These
17th-century cabinets were filled with preserved animals, horns, tusks, skeletons, minerals, and other types of objects. Often they would contain a mix of fact and fiction, including apparently
mythical creatures. Worm's collection contained, for example, what he thought was a
Scythian Lamb, a wooly
fern thought to be a plant/sheep fabulous creature. However he was also responsible for identifying the
narwhal's tusk as coming from a whale rather than a
unicorn, as most owners of these believed. The specimens displayed were often collected during exploring expeditions and trading voyages.
Cabinets of curiosities would often serve scientific advancement when images of their contents were published. The catalog of Worm's collection, published as the ''Museum Wormianum'' (
1655), used the collection artifacts as a starting point for Worm's speculations on philosophy, science, natural history, and more.
In 1587 Gabriel Kaltemarckt advised Christian I of Saxony that three types of item were indispensable in forming a "Kunstkammer" or art collection: firstly sculptures and paintings; secondly "curious items from home or abroad"; and thirdly "antlers, horns, claws, feathers and other things belonging to strange and curious animals"
[1] When
Albrecht Dürer visted the Netherlands in 1521, apart from artworks he sent back to
Nuremberg various animal horns, a piece of
coral, some large fish fins and a wooden weapon from the
East Indies.
[2]

"Male Narwhal or Unicorn", here still with his tusk
The
Ashmolean Museum in Oxford inherited the collection of
Elias Ashmole, itself largely derived from
John Tradescant the elder and his son
John Tradescant the younger. Parts of this are still displayed together, giving a good sense of the diversity of these collections. What was left of the famous and unique complete stuffed
Dodo was passed to the new
Pitt Rivers Museum in the nineteenth century. An important Native American artifact,
Chief Powhatan's Mantle, the cloak of the father of
Pocohontas, remains in the collection.
Obviously cabinets of curiosities were limited to those who could afford to create and maintain them. Many
monarchs, in particular, developed large collections. A rather under-used example, stronger in art than other areas, was the
Studiolo of Francesco I, the first Medici Grand-Duke of Tuscany.
Frederick III of Denmark, who added Worm's collection to his own after Worm's death, was another such monarch. A third example is the
Kunstkamera founded by
Peter the Great in
Saint Petersburg in 1727. The fabulous
Hapsburg Imperial collection, included important
Aztec artifacts, including the feather head-dress or crown of
Montezuma now in the
Museum of Ethnology, Vienna.
Similar collections on a smaller scale were the complex ''Kunstschränke'' produced in the early 17th century by the
Augsburg merchant, diplomat and collector
Philipp Hainhofer. These were cabinets in the sense of pieces of furniture, made from all imaginable exotic and expensive materials and filled with contents and ornamental details intended to reflect the entire cosmos on a miniature scale. The best preserved example is the one given by the city of Augsburg to King
Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in 1632, which is kept in the
Museum Gustavianum in
Uppsala.
In
Los Angeles, California, the modern-day
Museum of Jurassic Technology anachronistically seeks to recreate the sense of wonder that the old cabinets of curiosity once aroused. ''See Weschler book below.''
This idea of a cabinet of curiosities has been drawn from in recent publications and performances.
Cabinet magazine is a quarterly magazine of cultural artifacts and obscure historical footnotes. Internet blogger
Jason Kottke describes his popular site as a wunderkammer, as it is comprised primarily of links to things that are interesting.
Cabinet of Natural Curiosities (band), a Brooklyn-based folk/experimental music and art collective named after
Albertus Seba's collection of oddities, has released eclectic
folk and
improvisational albums based on the idea of the wunderkammer, as well as staging a performance of the
Theater of Natural Curiosities at
P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center in
Long Island City,
New York.
References
1. Gutfleish B and Menzhausen J, How a Kunstkammer should be formed, p11, Journal of the History of Collections, 1989 Vol I
2. A Hyatt Mayor, Prints and People, Metropolitan Museum of Art/Princeton, 1971, nos 48.ISBN 0-691-00326-2
Notable collections started in this way
★
Teylers Museum in
Haarlem
★
Boerhaave Museum in
Leiden
★
Ashmolean Museum Oxford — Ashmole and Tradescant collections
★
British Museum London —
Sloane and other collections
★
Pitt Rivers Museum (
Oxford,
England) — Ex-Ashmolean
Dodo
★
The Museum of Jurassic Technology
★
Kunstkamera in
Saint Petersburg,
Russia
Further reading
★ ''Under the Sign: John Bargrave as Collector, Traveler, and Witness'',
Stephen Bann (art historian), Michigan, 1995
★ ''The Origins of Museums: The Cabinets of Curiosities in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Europe'', ed. Oliver Impey and Arthur MacGregor, 2001, paperback, 431 pages, ISBN 1-84232-132-3
★ ''Cabinets for the curious: looking back at early English museums'', Ken Arnold, Ashgate, 2006, ISBN 0-7546-0506-X.
★ ''Mr. Wilson's Cabinet Of Wonder: Pronged Ants, Horned Humans, Mice on Toast, and Other Marvels of Jurassic Technology'', Lawrence Weschler, 1996, trade paperback, 192 pages, ISBN 0-679-76489-5 (see website link above)
★ ''The Cabinet of Curiosities'' (novel),
Douglas Preston and
Lincoln Child, Warner Books, 2003, paperback, ISBN 0-446-61123-9.
★ Helmar Schramm et al. (ed.). ''Collection, Laboratory, Theater. Scenes of Knowledge in the 17th Century'', Berlin/New York 2005, ISBN 978-3110177367
See also
★
Medical oddities
External links
★
WUNDERKAMMERN Contemporary art in private residence. Installations and performance art. Rome and Spello (Italy)
★
Collecting for the Kunstkammer article from the Metropolitan MA, NY
★
Smithsonian: "Crocodiles on the Ceiling"
★
The Augsburg Art Cabinet, about the Uppsala art cabinet
★
- Powhatan's Mantle in the Ashmolean - pictures, full descriptions and history
★
The King's Kunstkammer, a Danish Internet exhibition on the idea behind renaissance art and curiosity chambers (text in English)
★
Weblog modern equivalent of a Wunderkammer (Anthropology Essay)
★
A Digital Wunderkammer Experiment
★
Presentation and very large and detailed image of the art cabinet made for Duke August of Brunswick-Lüneburg, at the Rijksmuseum.
★
head-dress of
Montezuma,
Museum of Ethnology, Vienna
★
Cabinet of Natural Curiosities, Brooklyn-based folk/experimental music and art collective named after Albertus Seba's collection of oddities.
★
The Museum of Jurassic Technology official website
★
Cabinets of Curiosities, Museum in Waco, TX with a Cabinets of Curiosities Room named for John K. Strecker, who was curator for 30 years, the museum was established in 1893 and was the oldest museum in Texas when it closed in 2003 to be incorporated into the Mayborn Museum Complex.