
If you folÂlow the ongoÂing beef many popÂuÂlar sciÂenÂtists have with phiÂlosÂoÂphy, you’d be forÂgivÂen for thinkÂing the two disÂciÂplines have nothÂing to say to each othÂer. That’s a sadÂly false impresÂsion, though they have become almost entireÂly sepÂaÂrate proÂfesÂsionÂal instiÂtuÂtions. But durÂing the first, say, 200 years of modÂern sciÂence, sciÂenÂtists were “natÂurÂal philosophers”—often as well versed in logÂic, metaÂphysics, or theÂolÂoÂgy as they were in mathÂeÂmatÂics and taxÂonomies. And most of them were artists too of one kind or anothÂer. SciÂenÂtists had to learn to draw in order to illusÂtrate their findÂings before mass-proÂduced phoÂtogÂraÂphy and comÂputÂer imagÂing could do it for them. Many sciÂenÂtists have been fine artists indeed, rivalÂing the greats, and they’ve made very fine musiÂcians as well.

And then there’s Ernst HeinÂrich HaeckÂel, a GerÂman biolÂoÂgist and natÂuÂralÂist, philosoÂpher and physiÂcian, and proÂpoÂnent of DarÂwinÂism who described and named thouÂsands of species, mapped them on a genealogÂiÂcal tree, and “coined sevÂerÂal sciÂenÂtifÂic terms comÂmonÂly known today,” This is ColosÂsal writes, “such as ecolÂoÂgy, phyÂlum, and stem cell.” That’s an impresÂsive resume, isn’t it? Oh, and check out his art—his brilÂliantÂly colÂored, eleÂgantÂly renÂdered, highÂly stylÂized depicÂtions of “far flung floÂra and fauÂna,” of microbes and natÂurÂal patÂterns, in designs that inspired the Art NouÂveau moveÂment. “Each organÂism HaeckÂel drew has an almost abstract form,” notes KatherÂine Schwab at Fast Co. Design, “as if it’s a whimÂsiÂcal fanÂtaÂsy he dreamed up rather than a real creaÂture he examÂined under a microÂscope. His drawÂings of sponges reveal their intenseÂly geoÂmetÂric structure—they look archiÂtecÂturÂal, like feats of engiÂneerÂing.”

HaeckÂel pubÂlished 100 fabÂuÂlous prints beginÂning in 1889 in a series of ten books called KunÂstÂforÂmen der Natur (“Art Forms in Nature”), colÂlectÂed in two volÂumes in 1904. The astonÂishÂing work was “not just a book of illusÂtraÂtions but also the sumÂmaÂtion of his view of the world,” one which embraced the new sciÂence of DarÂwinÂian evoÂluÂtion wholeÂheartÂedÂly, writes scholÂar Olaf BreiÂdÂbach in his 2006 Visions of Nature.
Haeckel’s method was a holisÂtic one, in which art, sciÂence, and phiÂlosÂoÂphy were comÂpleÂmenÂtary approachÂes to the same subÂject. He “sought to secure the attenÂtion of those with an interÂest in the beauÂties of nature,” writes proÂfesÂsor of zoolÂoÂgy RainÂer WillÂmann in a book from Taschen called The Art and SciÂence of Ernst HaeckÂelÂ, “and to emphaÂsize, through this rare instance of the interÂplay of sciÂence and aesÂthetÂics, the proxÂimÂiÂty of these two realms.”

The gorÂgeous Taschen book includes 450 of Haeckel’s drawÂings, waterÂcolÂors, and sketchÂes, spread across 704 pages, and it’s expenÂsive. But you can see all 100 of Haeckel’s origÂiÂnalÂly pubÂlished prints in zoomable high-resÂoÂluÂtion scans here. Or purÂchase a one-volÂume reprint of the origÂiÂnal Art Forms in Nature, with its 100 gloÂriÂous prints, through this Dover pubÂliÂcaÂtion, which describes Haeckel’s art as “havÂing caused the accepÂtance of DarÂwinÂism in Europe…. Today, although no one is greatÂly interÂestÂed in HaeckÂel the biolÂoÂgist-philosoÂpher, his work is increasÂingÂly prized for someÂthing he himÂself would probÂaÂbly have conÂsidÂered secÂondary.” It’s a shame his sciÂenÂtifÂic legaÂcy lies neglectÂed, if that’s so, but it sureÂly lives on through his art, which may be just as needÂed now to illusÂtrate the wonÂders of evoÂluÂtionÂary biolÂoÂgy and the natÂurÂal world as it was in Haeckel’s time.

Note: An earÂliÂer verÂsion of this post appeared on our site in 2017.
RelatÂed ConÂtent
DownÂload 435 High ResÂoÂluÂtion Images from John J. Audubon’s The Birds of AmerÂiÂca
Josh Jones is a writer and musiÂcian based in Durham, NC. FolÂlow him at @jdmagness





















