In The Background: Art You May Never Notice

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The Colobus Monkeys diorama at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, completed in 1941.
Polina Yamshchikov
...to really motivate and generate concern, it's gotta be based on data, but you've got to touch the heart and passion of the person.

You've probably never heard of painter Fred F. Scherer. If you've ever been to the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York City, though, you may have seen his paintings — probably without realizing it.

Scherer died at age 98 a few weeks ago. His art — those big murals you see behind taxidermic animals in museum dioramas — deserves a closer look.

We visited the AMNH to photograph some of the installations containing his paintings, and spoke with Stephen C. Quinn, who recently retired as an artist from the museum, and knew Scherer well.

"Fred worked at the museum at the golden age of diorama production," Quinn says. "He started at age 19 and worked as an apprentice on the famed Mountain Gorilla diorama."

Most of Scherer's paintings were created between the 1940s and '60s — at a time when city-dwellers may have had little access to nature. Museum artists like Scherer worked to bring nature alive indoors.

According to Quinn, Scherer was one of many working in this genre that went back decades — "to a time that preceded really good photography."

Eastern Coastal Birds diorama
Polina Yamshchikov / for NPR
The Upland Gamebirds diorama, significantly reconfigured for the museum's 1964 reopening.
Polina Yamshchikov / for NPR
The Waterfowl of North America diorama, completed in 1964
Polina Yamshchikov / for NPR

Around the turn of the last century, Quinn says, "it's safe to say that people saw animals and nature as a vast resource that could never run out."

But with the Industrial Revolution underway, and the crowding of city centers, "the only way to really to connect people with the wonder of nature would be to recreate it inside the museum — and the diorama was the medium of choice."

In other words: To get people to care about nature, someone would have to bring nature to people. That's when museums as we know them today began to spring up. "No longer just the collections of wealthy travelers," Quinn says, but institutions with intentions to teach science and an appreciation for nature.

The White-Tailed Deer diorama, completed in 1940
Polina Yamshchikov / for NPR

Field work was an important practice not only for scientists, but also for naturalist artists like Scherer, who "worked directly from the landscape to interpret values and light and shadow," Quinn says.

"So he was very much a very academic and renaissance man in what he understood about art and nature."

The African Impala diorama
Polina Yamshchikov / for NPR
Cheetahs, a collaborative painting by Fred F. Scherer and James Perry Wilson, housed at the American Museum of Natural History.
Polina Yamshchikov / for NPR

Fast-forward to today: Are these paintings out of vogue? Do museum artists still exist? Is the original mission of bringing nature "to the people" more easily accomplished with photos and videos?

Fred F. Scherer, left, and James Perry Wilson, center, paint the background for the American Bison/Pronghorn antelope diorama in 1942.
D. Finnin / Courtesy AMNH

"You can look at the great landscape and wildlife painter of the past," Quinn says, "and there's something in their art that you can't find in the new generation of artists. Because it comes not from a technical process, but it really comes from the heart and soul of the individual being so in love with nature — that their work is imbued with that nature."

"Facts are interesting and important," Quinn says, "but ... as these early curators, artists and scientists realized, to really motivate and generate concern, it's got to be based on data, but you've got to touch the heart and passion of the person."

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Visitors to the American Museum of Natural History look at a diorama for which Scherer painted the background decades prior.
Polina Yamshchikov / for NPR

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