Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery

Last updated

Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery
The Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery - Dunedin - New Zealand (cropped).jpg
Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery
Established2018;6 years ago (2018)
Location61 Royal Terrace
Dunedin
New Zealand
Coordinates 45°51′54″S170°30′14″E / 45.865°S 170.504°E / -45.865; 170.504
Type Natural history museum
CollectionsNatural history, ethnography, art, paranormal
Curator Bruce Mahalski
Nearest parkingOn street
Website royaldunedinmuseum.com

The Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery is a private museum of bones, bone art, ethnographic artifacts, and assorted curios in Dunedin, New Zealand. Created by mural artist and sculptor Bruce Mahalski, in his Royal Terrace residence, it opened to the public in March 2018.

Contents

History

Model moa skeleton Model Moa Skeleton at the Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery (2019).jpg
Model moa skeleton

Mahalski had worked as an artist and illustrator for many years, and taught art in Wellington, New Zealand from 2004 to 2017. [1] Part of his art practice involved creating works from animal bones, reflecting his lifetime fascination with natural history. [1] [2] As a teenager, Mahalski worked as an unofficial intern at the Otago Museum, and opening his own museum had been a lifelong dream: "I wanted to work in museums when I was young, But I guess I’m not much of a team player, so it seemed easiest…just to try and set up my own." [2] [3]

Mahalski had been collecting shells, bones, crabs, and insects since the age of eight. [4] His collection of natural history curiosities and cultural objects, incorporating collections of both his parents (his father was a physician and his mother a psychologist), incorporated specimens found in nature, and objects acquired on his travels and from Trade Me. [2] [4]

In 2017, Mahalski moved back to his home town of Dunedin, and turned four rooms and the hall of his central city residence at 61 Royal Terrace into exhibition galleries, while continuing to live in the remainder of the house. [1] [2] [5] The Museum of Natural Mystery opened to the public on 23 March 2018, initially only on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays. [5] From the outside the museum resembles an ordinary Dunedin villa, but is decorated with the rongorongo script of Easter Island. [2]

Exhibits

Described as "David Lynch meets David Attenborough", [3] the museum exhibits "biological curiosities, ethnological art and unusual cultural artefacts". Some of the exhibits are memorials to people, including Mahalski's father, physician E. R. Nye. [2] They include the bones of many different species of animal (including humans), 200 skulls, pinned butterfly collections, vintage books (especially medical texts), and ephemera. [2] [5] On display is a hippo skull, and a giraffe skull sourced from a game park after the animal was culled (no animals were killed for the purposes of exhibition). [6]

Other exhibits include: [5]

The museum also contains a gallery where Mahalski exhibits his bone sculptures. [1] For him, "the roles of artist and collector are inseparable; items from his collection make their way into his art and his art is displayed next to his collection. More than this, he sees the whole collection as a work of art in itself." [7]

Related Research Articles

Graham Percy was a New Zealand-born artist, designer and illustrator. His work was the subject of The Imaginative Life and Times of Graham Percy, a major posthumous exhibition of his work which was shown at galleries throughout New Zealand including City Gallery Wellington, Gus Fisher Gallery Auckland, Sarjeant Gallery Whanganui, the Rotorua Museum and the Southland Museum and Art Gallery, Invercargill.

Shona Rapira Davies is a sculptor and painter of Ngātiwai ki Aotea tribal descent. Currently residing in Wellington New Zealand.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Z. Robinson</span> New Zealand painter (b.1953)

John Z. Robinson is a New Zealand painter, printmaker, and jeweller. He has lived in Dunedin, New Zealand since 1978.

Gretchen Albrecht is a New Zealand painter and sculptor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jeffrey Harris (artist)</span>

Jeffrey Harris is a New Zealand artist. Harris started his career in Christchurch, moving to Dunedin, New Zealand in 1969. In the early 1980s he worked briefly in the United States, before moving to Melbourne, Australia in 1986. In 2000 he returned to Dunedin, where he still lives. Largely self-taught, but mentored by notable New Zealand artists such as Michael Smither and Ralph Hotere, he has painted full-time since 1970.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Museum of Osteology</span> Private museum devoted to osteology, in Oklahoma, U.S.

The Museum of Osteology, located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S., is a private museum devoted to the study of bones and skeletons (osteology). This museum displays over 450 skeletons of animal species from all over the world. With another 7,000 specimens as part of the collection, but not on display, this is the largest privately held collection of osteological specimens in the world. The museum is an entity of its parent company, Skulls Unlimited International.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bill Culbert</span> New Zealand artist (1935–2019)

William Franklin Culbert was a New Zealand artist, notable for his use of light in painting, photography, sculpture and installation work, as well as his use of found and recycled materials.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fiona Pardington</span> New Zealand photographer (born 1961)

Fiona Dorothy Pardington is a New Zealand artist, her principal medium being photography.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ronnie van Hout</span> New Zealand painter, photographer and sculptor (born 1962)

Ronnie van Hout is a New Zealand artist and musician living in Melbourne, Australia. He works across a wide variety of media including sculpture, video, painting, photography, embroidery, and sound recordings.

Joanna Margaret Paul was a New Zealand visual artist, poet and film-maker.

Molly Morell Macalister was a New Zealand artist. Known for painting, woodcarving, and sculpture, her work is held in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.

Marilynn Lois Webb was a New Zealand artist, noted for her contributions to Māori art and her work as an educator. She was best known for her work in printmaking and pastels, and her works are held in art collections in New Zealand, the United States, and Norway. She lectured at the Dunedin School of Art, and was made an emeritus principal lecturer in 2004.

Adrienne Martyn is a New Zealand art photographer. Her work has been collected by numerous art galleries, museums and libraries in New Zealand including the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, the Dowse Art Museum, the Auckland Art Gallery, the Christchurch Art Gallery and the Hocken Library.

Heather Straka is a New Zealand artist, based in Auckland, who primarily works with the media of painting and photography. Straka is well known as a painter that utilises a lot of detail. She often depicts cultures that are not her own, which has caused controversy at times. Her work engages with themes of economic and social upheaval in interwar China, the role of women in Arabic society and Māori in relation to colonisation in New Zealand. Eventually, the figure became important in Straka's practice and she began to use photographs as the starting point for some of her works and "Increasingly too the body feminine has become her milieu".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bruce Mahalski</span>

Bruce Mahalski is a Dunedin artist, known for his illustration, street murals, and sculpture incorporating animal bones. He is founder and director of the Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery, a private museum of natural history and ethnographic objects and curios.

Louise Weaver is a contemporary Australian artist working in an array of media including sculptural installations, paintings, drawings, printmaking, collage, textiles, movement and sound. She is best known for her installation and sculptures of animals. Weaver's works have been exhibited in Australia and New Zealand and are featured in major collections both nationally and internationally.

Regan Gentry is a New Zealand artist and sculptor. He has held a number of artist in residence positions and his work can be seen in public spaces throughout New Zealand. His artworks are often constructed from recycled or repurposed items such as gorse bushes and road safety barriers.

Denis O'Connor is a New Zealand-based ceramicist, sculptor, and writer who has exhibited both in New Zealand and internationally.

Alan Robert Pearson was a neo-expressionist painter who lived in New Zealand and, in his later life, Australia.

Jasmine Togo-Brisby is a South Sea Islander artist known for her sculpture installations and portrait photographs. She currently resides in Te Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington and is one of few artists that centres Pacific slave labour as the focus of her practice.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Hill, Kim (15 September 2018). "Bruce Mahalski – Bone artist". RNZ. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Rykers, Ellen (22 January 2019). "Why the Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery is bound to attract the curious". North & South. Jan 2019. Archived from the original on 27 July 2019. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  3. 1 2 O'Connor, Ben (26 November 2018). "Skulls, relics and mummified felines at Dunedin's Museum of Natural Mystery". Newshub.
  4. 1 2 Hilton, Craig; Madden-Smith, Zoe (20 June 2018). "This Art Made From Skulls Will Make You Rethink Your Existence". Vice. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Lewis, John (24 March 2018). "No bones about it ... new museum one of mystery". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  6. McNeilly, Hamish (13 February 2019). "New Zealand's bone-chilling museum". Stuff. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  7. O'Mannin, Charlie (12 July 2018). "Telephones to Another World: Dunedin's Bone Artist and Collector of the Strange and Mysterious". Critic. 15.