The Scientific Sublime
Ian Blatchford and Tilly Blyth begin their series exploring how art and science have inspired each other with Joseph Wright of Derby's A Philosopher Giving A Lecture On The Orrery.
Sir Ian Blatchford, Director of the Science Museum Group, and the Science Museumβs Head of Collections, Dr Tilly Blyth, begin their series exploring how art and science have inspired each other with Joseph Wrightβs painting A Philosopher Giving A Lecture On The Orrery from 1766 and now in the permanent collection at Derby Museum. Wrightβs work celebrates the relationship between astronomical science and a religious understanding of the cosmos.
Itβs a fitting choice to begin this 20-part series that reveals how the ingenuity of science and technology has been incorporated into artistic expression β and how creative practice, in turn, stimulated innovation and technological change. As Ian Blatchford says; βIn Wright of Derbyβs painting, science makes a dramatic entry on stage. Itβs a new character in the human drama. A modern scientific age is announced with all its novelty, excitement, disruption and above all, the ambiguity of its potentialβ.
Tilly Blyth reveals that itβs likely that Wright first encountered an orrery when Scottish astronomer James Fergusson visited Derby on a lecture tour in 1762. The orrery was designed to explain Godβs creation, not replace it. Fergussonβs mechanical device is one of many types produced to demonstrate the workings of Newtonβs universe. Itβs a jewel within the Science Museum Group Collection and shows how key ideas about the rationality of the heavens spread far beyond those who first developed them.
Producer Adrian Washbourne
Produced in partnership with The Science Museum Group
Photograph: Christophel Fine Art/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
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- Mon 23 Sep 2019 13:45ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Tue 24 Sep 2019 21:30ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Mon 31 May 2021 19:45ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4