Picturing science: top 5 illustrated books

A study from Alexander von Humboldt's detailed expedition notebooks. This cross-sectional study of Chimborazo in Ecuador (1805) shows flora growing at different altitudes.

Alexander von Humboldt kept immensely detailed expedition notebooks. This cross-sectional study of Chimborazo in Ecuador (1805), derived from a sketch, shows flora growing at different altitudes on the volcano.{credit}akg-images. Reproduced in Explorers’ Sketchbooks. {/credit}

We live in illustrated times — a golden age for science graphics, data visualisation and scientific illustration generally. Photography has become positively eye-popping — from the cosmoscapes of Hubble to the Earthly delights of nature photography and photo archives the world over. And luckily for us, this gargantuan trove is being steadily funnelled into science-oriented coffee-table books.

I confess that in early in 2016 I was hanging around waiting for one. Then, like a fleet of barouches, several came along at once. In them I’ve found aesthetic thrills, deep insights and unexpected hilarity. Here are five of the best.

xxx turtle in xxx.

A green turtle (Chelonia mydas).{credit}Alex Mustard, in Secrets of the Sea.{/credit}

Animals proved a draw  — archival menageries and photo-surveys playing on our unquenchable fascination with other species. Secrets of the Seas: A Journey into the Heart of the Oceans (Bloomsbury), with text by marine biologist Callum Roberts and photographs by underwater adept Alex Mustard, explores the wild beneath the waves. It begins in the Coral Triangle, where 4 million square kilometres of tropical ocean support three-quarters of the world’s corals and 2,500 fish species. One denizen, the paddle-flap scorpionfish Rhinopias eschmeyeri of Indonesia, is a cartoon in bubble-gum pink. Beauties throng here too, from the sinuous ballets of California sealions Zalophus californianus to silver blizzards of shoaling fish — mackerel to barracuda.

Robert Hooke's 1665 drawing of a louse on a human hair, from Micrographia.

Robert Hooke’s 1665 engraving of a louse on a human hair, from Micrographia.{credit}National Library of Wales. Reproduced in The Paper Zoo.{/credit}

Roberts’s urgent text underlines the state of play for today’s beleaguered marine animals. The Paper Zoo focuses firmly on the planet’s biodiverse past, rummaging through the British Library’s wealth of natural history illustrations spanning 500 years. Science historian Charlotte Sleigh leads us through an ark of beasts from the exotic to the ‘paradoxical’, limned by greats of scientific illustration. Robert Hooke’s eighteenth-century microscopic menagerie of drone flies and lice jostle with natural historian John Ray’s Dürer-like renderings of fish from the 1680s. The nineteenth-century art ranges further South; my favourite is an anonymous double portrait of langurs (one black, one white) staring sagely out in mid-snack.

By necessity, many explorers were illustrators manqué — before the advent of reliable cameras, sketches were essential records of the geological, zoological and meteorological wonders they encountered. Explorers’ Sketchbooks: the Art of Discovery and Adventure (Thames & Hudson), by cultural historians Huw Lewis-Jones and Kari Herbert, is a mesmerising multiverse of them. Facsimile pages from the notebooks of 70 ‘terranauts’ give a stunning immediacy to distant time and space. Edward Wilson’s dreamlike evocations of the Antarctic, Maria Sibylla Merian’s caiman chomping on a false coral snake, the lava streams on Vesuvius mapped by John Auldjo, Alexander von Humboldt’s bold cross-section of Chimborazo — every turn of the page is a subtle thrill.

A phrenological bust.

A phrenological bust.{credit}Wellcome Library, London. Pictured in This Way Madness Lies.{/credit}

There are outer, and inner, journeys. Mike Jay’s This Way Madness Lies (Thames & Hudson) peers into the history of mental illness and its treatment as ‘madhouses’ gradually morphed into mental hospitals. (The book accompanies the Wellcome Collection show Bedlam.) Many of the more than 600 images, gleaned from European and US archives, are harrowing portraits of marginalised people further marginalised by experimental treatments ranging from the bizarrely exploitative to the ineffectual. Yet, as Jay notes, there were countercurrents. Franco Basaglia’s 1960s-70s psychiatric revolution in Italy sought to reinstate patient autonomy and social integration. Community refuges from Geel, Belgium, to Gould Farm, Massachusetts, offer treatment based on acceptance and occupation. And the science advances — even as depression and psychoses remain very much with us. A gallery features astounding art by the diagnosed, from proto-surrealist and Victorian parricide Richard Dadd to Adolf Wölfi, a talented abstractionist confined to a Bern asylum for life in 1895.

Finally, there are journeys into myth. The Un-Discovered Islands: An Archipelago of Myths and Mysteries, Phantoms and Fakes (Polygon) by travel writer Malachy Tallack and artist Katie Scott relates the stories of islands that never were. The Terra Novas off East Antarctica spotted by expedition leader Phillip Law in the 1960s were probably icebergs. The Auroras, a trio of islands halfway between the Falklands and South Georgia, were discovered in 1762, actually surveyed in 1796, and finally declared non-existent in the nineteenth century. There are more, from Hy Brasil to Bermeja, and all embellished by Scott’s strange and powerful images of whales, rabbits and jellyfish — species inhabiting what Tallack calls the “geography of the mind”.

John Auldjo's nineteenth-century map of successive lava flows on Vesuvius.

John Auldjo’s nineteenth-century map of successive lava flows on Vesuvius.{credit}Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Reproduced in Explorers’ Sketchbooks. {/credit}

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.

Menageries of the mind

Aquatint etching from Doty and Waterston's A Swarm, A Flock, A Host

From Doty and Waterston’s A Swarm, A Flock, A Host (aquatint etching, 2013){credit}Courtesy of the artist and DC Moore Gallery, New York{/credit}

Whatever ‘being human’ means, it seems irrevocably tied to the bestial. In real life we tame, avoid or study animals (think pigs, grizzlies, lab mice). In stories, we freight them with characteristics human, mystical or approximately their own (think the White Rabbit, Moby-Dick, Mrs Tiggywinkle). Beasts are burdened indeed — by human needs, questionings, hopes, dreams, morals and fantasies.

Reflecting that obsession, a small, beautifully curated exhibition at the British Library showcases a trove of illustrated books and audio from its holdings. Animal Tales abounds with children’s volumes from the seventeenth century on. But this is definitely a show for all ages, and one too that scatters science amid the cultural offerings.

A random sampling turns up a letter recording observations of summer birds of passage by Gilbert White (author of The Natural History of Selbourne, 1789); poems by Mark Doty (“Snail exudes a silver avenue”); cartoonist Art Spiegelman discussing his Holocaust cat-and-mouse saga Maus on tape; an eighteenth-century woodblock print of China’s picaresque hero Monkey battling a demon king; and an 1875 edition of the Grimm brothers’ Little Red Riding Hood showing slavering wolf and unfazed child against the proverbial dark wood.

Organised around themes such as animal allegories and metamorphoses, the show, curated by Matthew Shaw, reminds early on that Darwin and Freud expanded our view of animal nature — Darwin, by revealing our common descent, Freud by locating the wildness within the human psyche. (Multitudes of key findings in science are, of course, predicated on animals, from Darwin’s finches and Pavlov’s dogs to Julian Huxley’s great crested grebes.)

‘Very real, and very close’

On that front, I was moved by White’s mention of the ‘grasshopper lark’ (or warbler) — now on the IUCN Red List. I asked Shaw what, in an age of biodiversity drain, cloning and CRISPR, he feels stories hinging on animals have to tell us.

From Johannes Comenius's Orbis Sensualium Pictus (, 1659 edition)

From Johann Comenius’s Orbis Sensualium Pictus (The Visual World in Pictures, 1659 edition) {credit}The British Library{/credit}

Shaw said that, as a parent, he had noted how the state of childhood and of animals has been closely associated in culture, prompting him to wonder “how this has played out historically and culturally. In general, the stories in Animal Tales speak to a time when animals were very real, and very close.  We are now beyond that, and live away from animals in the main, yet have a greater imaginative link to them.”

To trace the dynamic progress of that association in this show is to step into multiple cultural streams. Philosopher Michel de Montaigne‘s famous question in his 1580 Essays (“When I play with my cat, how do I know that she is not amusing herself with me more than I with her?”), for instance, gets a mischievous gloss from Dutch painter Pieter van Veen in his 1602 edition — a charming sketch of cat and man in the margin.

I was mesmerised by a minuscule volume from 1659. Orbis Sensualium Pictus (The Visual World in Pictures) by trailblazing Czech educational theorist Johann Comenius is one of the first children’s picture books. Comenius  taught Latin using ‘nature’s way’ — through things, not grammar — and in the book employs the calls of various animals (juxtaposed with exquisitely whimsical engravings) to teach the language. Thus, the bleat of a lamb teaches the sound ‘b’, while the chirping, quacking and hooting of various species are described in both Latin and English, as:  “Ursus múrmurat: The bear grumbleth”.

Harnessing the bestial

Sarah Trimmer’s 1793 History of the Red-Breast Family also harnessed the bestial to enrich learning. A noted educational reformer in the tradition of Anna Barbauld, Trimmer used the tale (also known as Fabulous Histories) to teach children respect for animals which, she presciently argued, would help develop ‘universal benevolence’ later in life.

Sarah Trimmer's 1793 History of the Red-breast Family

Sarah Trimmer’s 1793 History of the Red-breast Family{credit}The British Library{/credit}

Twentieth-century offerings reveal animals of a fiercer cast, in keeping with a century of war. In novelist Chinua Achebe’s 1976 How the Leopard Got His Claws, Adrienne Kennaway’s illustration of the beast is a study in violence — made not long after Nigeria’s civil war. British poet Ted Hughes’s 1973 Crow, a collaboration with American multimedia artist Leonard Baskin, is stark and unsettling. In ‘Crow and Mama’, Baskin’s bird is darkness visible, save for its huge reptilian feet. It broods next to the lines, “He tried a step, then a step, and again a step — /Every one scarred her face for ever.”

There is more — from the stunning Bestiary by Pablo Neruda and woodcut master Antonio Frasconi, to Judith Kerr’s  disruptive tiger, Beatrix Potter’s Peter Rabbit and David Garnett’s Lady Into Fox. You can listen in to gems such as Noël Coward reading Ogden Nash’s poem Elephant. The final thematic area, ‘Call of the Wild’, features the work of writers who have engaged “with animals as animals”, Shaw noted. Here among masterpieces by Jack London and Herman Melville are Doty’s evocative poems from his collaboration with artist Darren Waterston, the modern bestiary A Swarm, A Flock, A Host.

As I left Animal Tales for that clogged artery, the Euston Road, I harked back to the thought that we are drawn to animals not least because we are increasingly alienated from them. We are a long way from the painted mammoths of Chauvet Cave, riding out what many call the sixth great extinction. Yet fauna retain their dominion over our imagination. Animal Tales is a way into that menagerie — or Serengeti — of the mind.

Animal Tales runs through 1 November at the British Library, Euston Road, London.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.