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Nature

Exhibition Info
NatureWednesday, April 07, 1999 - Sunday, May 16, 1999

This exhibition considered a small part of nature's history. It presented, through images and texts, four of the categories by which nature was percieved in 19th-century Britain and America. The inspiration and the source of its themes and labels was the recent publication, 'Nature. Western Attitudes since Ancient Times' by Peter Coates.

The following is a quote from Peter from that publication: "Nature is often presumed to be an objective reality with universal qualities unaffected by considerations of time, culture and place.... [Yet] nature has been variously considered both part of us and quite apart from us, nurturing and dangerous, animate and machine-like, spiritual and material. Nature, like us, has a history."

UNC-CH undergraduate, Elizabeth Materne, curated this exhibition for the Johnston Scholars' freshman seminar, "Stretching the Truth: the Ideals and Rituals of the University." one of the texts discussed in the seminar was Coates' 'Nature'.

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The Fall of Man
John Martin
n.d.
Inverary Castle, Argyleshire
Thomas Daniell
published 1817
Redstone Manor Pound
John Linnell
1851
The Shepherd Boy
James Clarke Hook
n.d.
The Sleeping Shepherd
Samuel Palmer
1857
A Summerland
David Lucas
1829-30
Voyage of Life: Youth
James Smillie
n.d.
The Willow
Samuel Palmer
1850