Édouard Verreaux Explained

Jean Baptiste Édouard Verreaux (16 September 1810  - 14 March 1868) was a French naturalist, taxidermist, collector, and dealer. Botanist and ornithologist Jules Verreaux was his older brother.[1]

Career

In 1830, Verreaux travelled to South Africa to help his brother pack up a large consignment of specimens. He returned in 1832 before continuing to Sumatra, Java, the Philippines and Indo-China. In 1834, he took control of the family's natural history business in Paris.

Lion Attacking a Dromedary

Verreaux designed and constructed the orientalist taxidermy diorama Lion Attacking a Dromedary for the Paris Exposition of 1867, where it won a gold medal.[2] [3] After the exposition, it was sold to the American Museum of Natural History, who exhibited it at the 1876 Centennial Exposition.[4] The diorama was sold to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in 1898, where it was displayed until its removal in 2020. The museum cited the work's lack of cultural accuracy and concerns raised by the Black Lives Matter movement as the reasons for the removal. In 2021, the diorama was put back on display at the Pittsburgh museum.

Associated writings

Notes and References

  1. Recherches anatomiques et paléontologiques pour servir à l'histoire des oiseaux fossiles de la France A. Milne-Edwards - 1868 "... remercier MM. Jules et Édouard Verreaux de leur utile concours."
  2. Rouvalis . Cristina . Lion Attacking A Dromedary . Carnegie Magazine . 2016 . Pittsburgh, PA . Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh . 28 September 2020.
  3. Book: Tait . Peta . Fighting nature: Travelling menageries, animal acts and war shows . 2016 . Sydney University Press . 9781743324318 . 63 . War with animals. j.ctt1dt00vp.6.
  4. News: Gilliland . Donald . 'High art' with human skull goes on display at Carnegie museum . 28 September 2020 . TribLive . 29 January 2017.
  5. http://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-nb2008-002727 WorldCat Identities