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British artist and gallery director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Viktor Wynd is a British artist, author, and curator, known for his collections of curiosities.
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Viktor Wynd | |
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Birth name | Robert Wyndam Bucknell |
Born | London, U.K. | November 5, 1976
Occupations |
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Years active | 1995–present |
Wynd established The Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities, Fine Art & Natural History in London's East End, a cabinet of curiosities featuring two-headed lambs, Fiji mermaids, unicorns, taxidermy, dodo bones, erotica, old master etchings, surrealist, occult and outsider art,[1] and celebrity faeces.[2] The museum was featured in a BBC Four documentary on cabinets of curiosity.[3][non-primary source needed]
He previously ran a curiosity shop, Viktor Wynd's Little Shop of Horrors, dealing in taxidermy, shrunken heads and other oddities,[4] including the erect mummified penis of a hanged man.[5] In 2010 it was reported that Jonathan Ross's wife Jane Goldman had bought the skeleton of a two-headed baby from the shop.[6]
He has curated around 50 exhibitions at his gallery, Viktor Wynd Fine Art, including exhibitions on Mervyn Peake,[7] Tessa Farmer,[8] Leonora Carrington,[9] and Stephen Tennant.[10]
In 2005, Wynd had an exhibition entitled "Structures of The Sublime: Towards a Greater Understanding of Chaos" at Ingalls & Associates in Miami, featuring drawings and video.[11][non-primary source needed]
In 2007 he had another exhibition in Miami entitled "The Sorrows of Young Wynd" (in reference to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe) based around a waxwork figure of himself hanging by a noose from the middle of the gallery, and many other images of him committing suicide.[12][non-primary source needed]
He founded The Last Tuesday Society with David Piper in 2003,[citation needed] which became known in London for its halloween parties and masked balls,[13] often with literary themes.[14] He also organised Wyndstock, a festival held at Houghton Hall in Norfolk,[15] and runs a long-running literary salon in London.[16]
Wynd is the author of two books: Structures of The Sublime: Towards a Greater Understanding of Chaos, a fragmentary, modernist anti-novel published in 2005 in Miami, and Viktor Wynd's Cabinet of Wonders, published by Prestel/Random House in 2014.[17][non-primary source needed]
Wynd wrote an essay about his friend Sebastian Horsley for Yale University Press's book Artist/Rebel/Dandy: Men of Fashion, compiled by Kate Irvin and Laurie Anne Brewer.[citation needed]
He has made several TV appearances, including the National Geographic documentary series Taboo.[citation needed] He has also lectured about cabinets of curiosities, his book and his museum at The Lost Lectures,[18] the British Library,[19] Manchester University,[20] 5x15,[21] and the Barbican.[22]
He is a committee member of the London Institute of 'Pataphysics.[23]
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