
Wax anatomical models in the Zoologia "La Specola"
The 'Museum of Zoology and Natural History, "La Specola"' is located in
Florence, next to the
Pitti Palace. The name "
Specola" means
observatory, a reference to the astronomical observatory founded there in 1790. It now forms part of the
Museo di Storia Naturale di Firenze.
The museum has deep ties to history; parts of the collection trace back to the
Medici Family. It is known for its collection of wax anatomical models from the 18th century.
This museum is located in the former Palazzo Torrigani at Via Romana 17, near the
Pitti Palace.
[1] The Imperial Regio Museo di Fisica e Storia Naturale (The Imperial-Royal Museum for Physics and Natural History) was founded in
1771 by
Peter Leopold of Hapsburg-Lotharingen,
Grand Duke of Tuscany, to publicly display the large collection of natural curiosities such as
fossils, animals, minerals and exotic plants acquired by several generations of the Medici. At the time of its opening, and for the first years of the 19th century, it was the only scientific museum or ''
Wunderkammer'' of its kind specifically created for the public to view. It opened on 21 February 1775 to the general public.
[2]
Today the museum spans 34 rooms and contains not only zoological subjects, such as a stuffed
hippopotamus (a 17th-century Medici pet, which once lived in the Boboli Gardens), but also a collection of
anatomical waxes, an art developed in Florence in the 17th century for the purpose of teaching
medicine. This collection is very famous worldwide for the incredible accuracy and realism of the details, copied from real corpses. Also in ''La Specola'' on display are scientific and medical instruments. Parts of the museum are decorated with frescoes and
pietra dura representing some of the principal Italian scientific achievements from the Renaissance to the late 18th century.
The visit to this part of the museum inspired the creators of the
Hollywood movie ''
Hollow Man'' by
Paul Verhoeven, especially in those scenes when the protagonist gradually turns from invisibility to visibility, first showing veins, then organs and muscles under the skin. It is also used in Eleanor Updale's ''
Montmorency and the assasins'' as the centre for anarchists.
Notes
1. Marta Poggesi, “The Anatomical Waxes of “La Specola,” in ''La Specola: Anatomie in Wachs in Kontrast zu Bildern der modernen Medizin/ Anatomy in Wax in Contrast with Images of Modern Medicine''. Eds. Peter Friess and Susanne Witzgall. Bonn: Deutsches Museum Bonn, 2000. 12-21.
2. ''Encyclopaedia Anatomica: Museo La Specola Florence.'' Köln: Taschen, 2004.ISBN 3822838489
Important Collections
★
Camillo Rondani Diptera and
Hymenoptera
★
Ruggero Verity Lepidoptera
★ Also see entry for painter,
Jacopo Ligozzi
External links
★
Museum of Zoology and Natural History, "La Specola"