An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump

When Art was Beautiful – An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump

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The (British) National Gallery’s Picture of the Month this month is Joseph Wright of Darby’s “An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump.”

The jar is held by a  scientist. He is showing the group how sucking air out of a jar creates a  vacuum. Starved of oxygen, the bird grows distressed, and the scientist  demonstrates how it cannot breathe within the vacuum.

The group reacts to this experiment in different ways. The two young  girls are clearly upset. A fatherly figure either consoles them or  explains the experiment to them. In contrast, the young boy directly  opposite leans in, engrossed. Next to him, a man holds a stopwatch,  timing the experiment. Another man, hands clasped, appears deep in  thought. The young couple seem only interested in each other. 

The fate of the bird is held in suspense. A boy holds an open cage –  is this so that the bird can go back in safely, or has he just released  it?

Wright 'of Derby' may  have left some clues within the painting. Some believe the glass  container on the table holds a skull, which in paintings usually acts as  a 'memento mori' – a reminder that we will all die one day. Candles and  skulls are often companions in art, the candle demonstrating the  passage of time and the skull its end.

An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump  can be seen as a work of the Enlightenment, an intellectual and  scientific movement across Europe in the 18th century. Alongside the  Industrial Revolution, this was a time of radical social, political and  technological change.

The children so starkly lit in the painting are part of the  generation who will inherit this new world, and who, like us, must  decide where they stand on the ethical questions raised by science and  progress. 

-The National Gallery                           
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