Skip to content
Rosamond Purcell, ‘Eye Made of Glass, Antler Bone, and Metal, Collection of Peter the Great, Kunstkamera, St. Petersburg, circa 1990. Inkjet print, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell

Rosamond Purcell career-spanning exhibition on view at Addison Gallery

Rosamond Purcell, ‘Eye Made of Glass, Antler Bone, and Metal, Collection of Peter the Great, Kunstkamera, St. Petersburg, circa 1990. Inkjet print, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell
Rosamond Purcell, ‘Eye Made of Glass, Antler Bone, and Metal, Collection of Peter the Great, Kunstkamera, St. Petersburg, circa 1990. Inkjet print, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell

ANDOVER, Mass. – Rosamond Purcell: Nature Stands Aside, the first retrospective of the artist’s work, is on view at the Addison Gallery of American Art through December 31. The exhibition will feature more than 150 of the artist’s haunting photographs, assemblages, collages and installations spanning Purcell’s career from the late 1960s to the present day.

Throughout her more than 50-year practice, Purcell has collaborated with paleontologists, literary scholars, historians, museum curators and erudite magicians, and has drawn inspiration from iconoclastic sources, from a 13-acre junkyard in Maine to natural history museum collections from around the world. A pioneer of fine art color photography and an inspiration to a generation of artists from Mark Dion to Sally Mann, Purcell probes the actions of time and decay as elemental to the natural world and the human condition.

Rosamond Purcell, ‘Saki and Golden Lion Tamarin, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden,’ 1990s. Inkjet print, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell
Rosamond Purcell, ‘Saki and Golden Lion Tamarin, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden,’ 1990s. Inkjet print, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell

Among the works in the exhibition are Purcell’s lesser-known early portraits and radically experimental Polaroid prints from the 1970s and 1980s, as well as her photographs of preserved animals in museums’ collections, fossils, eggs, nests, specimens from medical museums, and forgotten human belongings, in addition to mixed media collages and constructions, including Wall, a 20-foot-long installation composed of naturally-patinated scrap metal and other objects rescued from obscurity.

 Rosamond Purcell, ‘Wall,’ 1990s. Mixed media installation, 121 by 264 by 5in. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell

Rosamond Purcell, ‘Wall,’ 1990s.Mixed media installation, 121 by 264 by 5in.Courtesy of the artist.©Rosamond Purcell

“This retrospective is a long overdue examination of Purcell’s work, which reveals the connections between the unsettling and the sublime, the beautiful and the bizarre, the natural and the manufactured,” said Allison Kemmerer, director of the Addison Gallery of American Art. “The Addison has long presented and championed photography, and Purcell’s experimental Polaroid work in the 1970s was instrumental in the recognition of color photography as fine art. But just as her work straddles the intersection of art and science, Purcell herself defies any simple categorization.”

Rosamond Purcell, ‘Mermaid #1,’ 1970. Polaroid, 4 ¼ by 5 1/4in. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell
Rosamond Purcell, ‘Mermaid #1,’ 1970. Polaroid, 4 ¼ by 5 1/4in. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell

“Purcell’s six decades of work, while brilliantly varied and resistant to easy classification, speak eloquently to her persistent interrogation of the ways in which we attempt to understand the world around us, exposing how the barriers of logic and reason that we erect to make order out of chaos are porous and unreliable,” said Gordon Wilkins, the Addison’s Robert M. Walker associate curator of American art and curator of the exhibition. “While Purcell is sui generis, her photography, scholarship, installations, trailblazing institutional collaborations and writing have inspired a generation of artists. Now, in the year she turns 80, we bring the full sweep of her works together for the first time, underscoring her enduring impact as an artist and a thinker.”

Rosamond Purcell, ‘It’s How You Play the Game,’ 1989. Mixed media collage, 12 by 12in. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell
Rosamond Purcell, ‘It’s How You Play the Game,’ 1989. Mixed media collage, 12 by 12in. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell

Purcell grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and after graduating from Boston University began her career as a teacher before she began experimenting with photography after receiving her first Polaroid camera in the late 1960s. In the early 1980s, she began creating the work for which she is best known: images of natural history specimens stored deep, oftentimes, in the bowels of scientific museums and research institutions around the world.

Rosamond Purcell, ‘Bats, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University,’ 1984. Gelatin silver print, 8 by 10in. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell
Rosamond Purcell, ‘Bats, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University,’ 1984. Gelatin silver print, 8 by 10in. Courtesy of the artist. © Rosamond Purcell

Purcell was the subject of the 2016 documentary film An Art That Nature Makes: The Work of Rosamond Purcell by Molly Bernstein. Purcell’s books include Book Nest; Illuminations: A Bestiary; A Glorious Enterprise: The Museum of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia; and Owls Head: On the Nature of Lost Things, which documents Purcell’s 20-year exploration of a multi-acre Maine junkyard. Her work has been exhibited throughout the U.S. and Europe and is held in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art; the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C.; the V&A in London; the Art Institute of Chicago and the National Gallery of Canada.

Rosamond Purcell: Nature Stands Aside is curated by Gordon Wilkins. A full-color catalog published in collaboration with Rizzoli Electa will accompany this exhibition with texts by Mark Dion, Christoph Irmscher, Errol Morris, Rosamond Purcell, Belinda Rathbone and Gordon Wilkins. Support for this exhibition has been provided by the Artist’s Resource Trust.

Visit the website of the Addison Gallery of American Art and see its dedicated page for Rosamond Purcell: Nature Stands Aside.

Rosamond Purcell