
A Butler Day at St John鈥檚 College tomorrow (12 January) celebrates the many trips to Italy undertaken by the polymath Samuel Butler, author of Erewhon. 探花直播event comprises an exhibition and talks which are open to the public and free of charge.
A Butler Day at St John鈥檚 College tomorrow (12 January) celebrates the many trips to Italy undertaken by the polymath Samuel Butler, author of Erewhon. 探花直播event comprises an exhibition and talks which are open to the public and free of charge.
He was also forthright and disputatious, famously arguing that the Odyssey was not the work of Homer but of an unknown female author from Sicily.
Samuel Butler (1835-1902) was a man who defied easy categorisation: he has been most commonly described as a polymath, maverick and iconoclast. He was a scholar and writer, artist and photographer, musician and composer, traveller and sheep farmer. Prodigiously talented and hard-working, he was also forthright and disputatious, famously arguing that the Odyssey was not the work of Homer but of an unknown female author from Sicily.
Above all, Butler was an enthusiast who immersed himself in subjects that ranged from devotional art to the concept of evolution. He is best known for his novel Erewhon 鈥 鈥榥owhere鈥 spelt (almost) backwards 鈥 a satire on Victorian society that challenged the accepted doctrine of the church and wider establishment.
Tomorrow the Old Library at St John鈥檚 College, Cambridge, will host an exhibition titled 鈥楢dventures in Italy鈥 that offers a rare glimpse into Butler鈥檚 varied and immensely productive life, focusing in particular on his passion for Italy, a place he described as his 鈥渟econd country鈥. 探花直播exhibition is open to the public, free of charge.
Three talks taking place at St John鈥檚 the same day, also free of charge, explore different aspects of Butler鈥檚 links with Italy 鈥 including the way in which he was perceived by the Italian intelligentsia as a 鈥済reat novelist and English biologist friend of Italy鈥.
探花直播artefacts on display in the exhibition are drawn from the extensive collection of Samuel Butler materials that were given to St John鈥檚, where Butler was an undergraduate in the 1850s. Among these are photographs, watercolours, pen and ink sketches, maps and souvenirs, as well as a copy of Butler鈥檚 guide book to the Alps complete with descriptions of visits to historic buildings and conversations with local people. Also on display will be one of Butler鈥檚 passports, a document that for more than a century had been tucked away inside a small leather wallet, and has now been opened up and conserved.
Butler first visited Italy with his family aged eight. He returned many times as an adult, walking hundreds of miles between towns and villages from the rugged Alps in the north to the shores of Sicily in the far south. Wherever he went, he made sketches and took photographs using the latest techniques and equipment, which made snapshot photography possible for the first time during the 1880s.
By the time he was exploring Italy on foot, Butler was largely estranged from his family, who had intended that he would enter the church 鈥 something he found impossible after losing his faith. This development had prompted him to sail to New Zealand, where he established a sheep station in the early 1860s. It was there that he gathered the material for his first novel Erewhon, which was initially published anonymously.
A later novel, 探花直播Way of All Flesh, which attacks Victorian hypocrisy, was published after Butler鈥檚 death following his instructions that it should not appear during the lifetime of his sisters as it was based on his own family experiences.
探花直播Samuel Butler Collection was given to St John鈥檚 College in 1918 by Butler鈥檚 friend and biographer Henry Festing Jones. In July 2011, a generous grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund kick-started a two-year project to catalogue the collection and open it up to the public through special events and the creation of online resources. 听
Saturday鈥檚 event, the second of three Butler Days, is part of that project. It has been organised by Rebecca Watts, Butler Project Associate at St John鈥檚 College Library. She says that the task of cataloguing the collection, though substantial, has benefited from Butler鈥檚 unusually meticulous way of working: each of the thousands of glass plate negatives that arrived at St John鈥檚 as part of the Collection came in envelopes noting when they were taken and what they show. This allows researchers to pinpoint with accuracy the scenes and characters depicted.
A series of talks during the afternoon begins with a lecture by Cristiano Turbil, who will offer an Italian perspective on the reception of Butler and his works. This will be followed by an exposition by painter and art historian Clarice Zdanski, of how Butler has influenced her own work and teaching. Finally, Julia Powles, a graduate student at St John鈥檚 who last year undertook a series of epic walks along Butler鈥檚 routes through the Italian Alps, will take the audience along her journey with the aid of words and pictures.
探花直播鈥楢dventures in Italy鈥 exhibition in the Old Library at St John鈥檚 College is open to the public tomorrow (12 January) 10am to 4pm. 探花直播talks take place at 12 noon (Cristiano Turbil on 鈥楽amuel Butler, un Amico dell鈥橧talia: 探花直播History of a Cultural Partnership鈥), 2pm (Clarice Zdanski on 鈥楥onsigning the Old Masters to Limbo: Samuel Butler鈥檚 Influence on How I Teach Art and Art History鈥) and 3.30pm (Julia Powles on 鈥極ver the Range with Samuel Butler and Some Remarkably Persistent Gnats鈥), in the newly refurbished Divinity School, opposite St John鈥檚 Great Gate. To reserve a place at the talks contact Rebecca Watts on rew35@cam.ac.uk or telephone the Library on 01223 339362.
For more information on the Samuel Butler Project go to
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