Language: French
In Crânes: 300 Spécimens de la Collection Dudley, Simon Winchester (author of The Profesor and the Madman, Atlantic: A Biography of the Ocean, Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded, and others) tells the captivating story of skulls, both human and animal, and of one man who has spent a lifetime obsessively assembling what is the largest and most wide-ranging personal collection of animal skulls in the world.
Alan Dudley, who hails from the English Midlands, has in his possession more than 2000 skulls that he has been collecting, preparing, and cataloging to almost museum quality over the course of more than five decades. He is well known in some circles as an authority on skulls, and his collection is recognized as an excellent reference of great breadth and depth. It is his collection that forms the centerpiece of Crânes: 300 Spécimens de la Collection Dudley and around which Winchester weaves his ever-engaging prose.
He begins with Dudley's own evolution from a young lad drawn to the local wildlife and a collector of birds' eggs and newts to a grown man who learned the skills of taxidermy and the various ways of preparing a skull (and who, in his zeal to acquire the rarest types of skulls, was once arrested and charged with breaching the Convention on Intemational Trade in Endangered Species).
Winchester continues with an enlightening explanation of the skull's component parts – the cranium, the mandible, and the shape and positioning of eye sockets and auditory bullae – followed by a discussion of species-specific features like horns, teeth, beaks, and bills. He then delves into an exploration of the science and pseudo-science of skulls, covering legitimate anthropological discoveries such as Mrs. Ples and Lucy, and the study of the evolution of the human skull, as well as hoaxes such as the Piltdown Man and the practice of phrenology.
Departing from a physical and scientific focus, Winchester also mines the rich tradition of skulls in art, starting from the Middle Ages and the works of Fra Angelico and Leonardo da Vinci and continuing through the present day with the paintings of Georgia O'Keefe and the creations of Steven Gregory and Damien Hirst. He writes about the history of the skull as an icon of death and a symbol of power and warning and discusses the role of skulls in religion, most notably in the Mexican Day of the Dead.
At the heart of Crânes: 300 Spécimens de la Collection Dudley is the extraordinary visual array of never-before-seen images of Dudley's invaluable collection. On display are more than 300 of the most exquisite specimens. From an aardvark to a red-bellied piranha, an African lion to a wrinkled hotnbill, every skull is photographed with stunning clarity, often from several angles to give the most intimate and intriguing view possible. Organized by class, and species, the skulls include explanatory notes highlighting each specimen's most interesting features, as well as additional information on the animal's taxonomy, behavior, and diet.
In Crânes: 300 Spécimens de la Collection Dudley, brilliant storytelling combines with surprisingly beautiful imagery of the endless variety of cranial structures of the animal kingdom. The result, as Winchester says, is "a near-perfect survey [...] designed for browsing, for amusement, for macabre fascination, but, most of all, for learning."
Summary in French:
Les crânes exercent depuis des millénaires un étrange pouvoir de fascination sur l’imagination des hommes. Ils symbolisent à la fois la vie présente et la vie disparue; ils inspirent la terreur et le respect; ils parlent de la vie, de la mort et de l’au-delà, du Bien et du Mal; du danger, de l’autorité et de la majesté.
Dans cet ouvrage, Simon Winchester présente l’histoire captivante de crânes, d’hommes et d’animaux, mais aussi celle d’Alan Dudley, un homme qui a passé sa vie à rassembler avec une passion obsessionnelle ce qui est sans doute la plus grande et la plus exhaustive des collections personnelles de crânes dans le monde.
Alan Dudley possède plus de 2000 crânes qu’il a préparés et catalogués avec des soins dignes d’un musée, pendant plus d’un demi-siècle. Reconnu et salué comme un pair dans le cercle des spécialistes, il offre une collection de référence, qui constitue la partie centrale de cet ouvrage.
Crânes est ainsi selon l’auteur "une vue d’ensemble presque parfaite, un recueil biologiquement équilibré, taxinomiquement exhaustif: il a été conçu pour être feuilleté, pour distraire ou pour susciter une fascination (un peu macabre), mais surtout pour instruire."