24T36 Vienna’s Venus & Fanny, prehistoric female figures
E35 V2
I’ve previously written about a distinct phase in the architectural evolution of late 19th-century Vienna. The Ringstraße, or Ring Road, brought to the city a flurry of new buildings after the demolition of the former inner-city wall.
Completed in 1889, the Museum of Natural History (Naturhistorisches Museum, NHM) operates as science and archaeology museum and research facility, containing a large inventory of natural artifacts first collected together by the Habsburgs in 1750. Their collection includes two pieces I’ve wanted to see for some time: demonstrations of human desire for expression, that have survived tens of thousands of years. They are the Venus of Willendorf and Fanny of Stratzing; both are female figures, each about the size of an outstretched thumb.






I made all images above with an iPhone15 on 12 Jun 2024. I received neither sponsor nor support from any organization. This post composed with Jetpack for iOS appears on Fotoeins Fotografie at fotoeins DOT com.