The beauty of the robin s egg is not lost on the child who
discovers the nest, nor on the collector of nature s marvels. Such
instances of wonder find fitting expression in the photographs of
Rosamond Purcell, whose work captures the intricacy of nests and
the aesthetic perfection of bird eggs. Mining the ornithological
treasures of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, Purcell
produces pictures as lovely and various as the artifacts she
photographs. The dusky blue egg of an emu becomes a planet. A
woodpecker s nest bears an uncanny resemblance to a wooden shoe. A
resourceful rock dove weaves together scrap metal and spent
fireworks. A dreamscape of dancing monkeys emerges from the
calligraphic markings of a murre egg.
Alongside Purcell s photographs, Linnea Hall and Rene Corado
offer an engaging history of egg collecting, the provenance of the
specimens in the photographs, and the biology, conservation, and
ecology of the birds that produced them. They highlight the
scientific value that eggs and nest hold for understanding and
conserving birds in the wild, as well as the aesthetic charge they
carry for us.
How has evolution shaped the egg or directed the design of the
nest? How do the photographs convey such infinitesimal and yet
momentous happenstance? The objects in "Egg & Nest" are
specimens of natural history, and in Purcell s renderings, they are
also the most natural art.
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