Trips Places Foods Stories Newsletters
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

No search results found for
“”

Make sure words are spelled correctly.

Try searching for a travel destination.

Places near me Random place

Popular Destinations

  • Paris
  • London
  • New York
  • Berlin
  • Rome
  • Los Angeles
Trips Places Foods Stories Newsletters
Sign In Join
Places near me Random place
All the United States Massachusetts Cambridge Blaschka Glass Flowers
AO Edited

Blaschka Glass Flowers

Impossibly life-like natural history models created out of glass by a father and son.

Cambridge, Massachusetts

Added By
Dylan Thuras
Email
Been Here
Want to go
Added to list
CAPTION
  curiousexpeditions/Flickr
Photo by Curious Expeditions   curiousexpeditions/Flickr
Photo by Curious Expeditions   curiousexpeditions/Flickr
Photo by Curious Expeditions   curiousexpeditions/Flickr
Glass Banana. Photo by Curious Expeditions   curiousexpeditions/Flickr
Photo by Curious Expeditions   curiousexpeditions/Flickr
  User submitted
  User submitted
  User submitted
Been Here
Want to go
Added to list

About

Natural history museums opening in the mid-1800s had a problem. While dioramas could depict the mammals of the world, the marine and botanical were difficult to preserve and the papier-maché or wax models didn't begin to capture the beauty, translucence, or detail from the real world.

Leopold Blaschka came from a long line of glass artisans, and as a young man joined the family business making glass ornaments and glass eyes for taxidermists. Leopold's real passion, however, was for natural history. Leopold began crafting glass models of exotic flowers in 1850, and what started as a hobby became a profession. Leopold was soon joined by his son Rudolf making sea anemones, aquaria, snails, and jellyfish for London's Natural History Museum. The models were hailed as “an artistic marvel in the field of science and a scientific marvel in the field of art.”

It would be Harvard who funded the greatest Blaschka collection. Persuaded to sign an exclusive contract with Harvard, the father and son began making them in 1890 until Leopold died in 1895. Rudolf, however, continued making the glass flowers for another 45 years stopping only 3 years before his own death. Together they created over 4000 botanical models for Harvard or roughly one every five days for 50 years.

So accurate are the models that when Donald Schnell, a botanist who had just discovered the hereto unknown pollinating mechanism of the Pinguicula flower, looked at the 120-year-old Blaschka model Schnell was shocked to see the exact process illustrated in glass "one sculpture showed a bee entering the flower and a second showed the bee exiting, lifting the stigma apron as it did so," exactly as Schnell had discovered "As far as I know Professor Goodale never published this information, nor did it seem to have been published by anyone back then, but the process was faithfully executed."

Related Tags

Natural History Museums Museums Glass Flowers Wonder Cabinets Natural Wonders Plants Natural History Collections Blaschka Models Nature

Know Before You Go

From Harvard Square, Cambridge, MA, walk across the historic campus, keeping John Harvard statue to your right. At Memorial Hall and the Science Center, walk down Oxford Street 100 yards. You'll see museum's banner on right at 26 Oxford Street.

Community Contributors

Added By

Dylan

Edited By

laurenmishgraf, mbison

  • laurenmishgraf
  • mbison

Published

January 31, 2009

Edit this listing

Make an Edit
Add Photos
Blaschka Glass Flowers
26 Oxford St.
Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138
United States
42.378357, -71.11648
Visit Website
Get Directions

Nearby Places

Harvard Museum of Natural History

Cambridge, Massachusetts

miles away

Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Mark I

Cambridge, Massachusetts

miles away

Harvard Divinity School Labyrinth

Cambridge, Massachusetts

miles away

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of Cambridge

Cambridge

Massachusetts

Places 29
Stories 6

Nearby Places

Harvard Museum of Natural History

Cambridge, Massachusetts

miles away

Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Mark I

Cambridge, Massachusetts

miles away

Harvard Divinity School Labyrinth

Cambridge, Massachusetts

miles away

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of Cambridge

Cambridge

Massachusetts

Places 29
Stories 6

Related Stories and Lists

Feast Your Eyes on These Delicate Glass Models of Decaying Fruit

models

By Jessica Leigh Hester

Rotten Apples That Will Last Forever

31 days of halloween

By Cara Giaimo

Curious Fact of the Week: The Sistine Chapel of the Glass World

curious fact of the week

By Allison Meier

Related Places

  • One of the museum’s dioramas of animals staged in their natural habitats.

    Birchington-on-Sea, England

    Powell-Cotton Dioramas

    An English explorer's vast natural history collection has the first realistic dioramas of animals staged in their natural habitats.

  • Florence, Italy

    La Specola Zoological Museum

    An incredible menagerie of more than 3 million taxidermied animals at the oldest science museum in Europe.

  • The Buckhorn Saloon and Museum.

    San Antonio, Texas

    Buckhorn Saloon and Museum

    A 131-year-old wunderkammer of Texas history.

  • The Pember Museum

    Granville, New York

    The Pember Museum

    Tucked away on the second floor of a small town library is one of the great private Victorian taxidermy collections looking today very much like it did in 1909.

  • Chlosyne leanira alma at the Bohart Museum of Entomology

    Davis, California

    Bohart Museum of Entomology

    This museum boasts the ninth-largest collection of insects in North America.

  • Mammal Room

    Hanoi, Vietnam

    Bao tang Dong vat (Hanoi Zoological Museum)

    A French-Colonial era collection of taxidermy and wet specimens, secreted away in the National University of Hanoi.

  • One of the larger specimens.

    Singapore

    The Live Turtle and Tortoise Museum

    Terrapins of all colors and shapes are quick to bring fascination (and possibly long life) at this museum.

  • Brightly Colored Display Cases

    London, England

    Horniman Museum and Gardens

    A Victorian natural history and ethnographic museum with wonderful turn-of-the-century, science-book-esque evolution displays.

Aerial image of Vietnam, displaying the picturesque rice terraces, characterized by their layered, verdant fields.
Atlas Obscura Membership

See Fewer Ads


Become an Atlas Obscura member and experience far fewer ads

Become a Member

Get Our Email Newsletter

Follow Us

Facebook YouTube Twitter Instagram Pinterest RSS Feed

Get the app

Download the App
Download on the Apple App Store Get it on Google Play
  • All Places
  • Latest Places
  • Most Popular
  • Places to Eat
  • Random
  • Nearby
  • Add a Place
  • Stories
  • Food & Drink
  • Itineraries
  • Lists
  • Puzzles
  • Video
  • Podcast
  • Newsletters
  • All Trips
  • Family Trip
  • Food & Drink
  • History & Culture
  • Wildlife & Nature
  • FAQ
  • Membership
  • Feedback & Ideas
  • Community Guidelines
  • Product Blog
  • Unique Gifts
  • Work With Us
  • About
  • FAQ
  • Advertise With Us
  • Advertising Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms of Use
Atlas Obscura

© 2025 Atlas Obscura. All Rights Reserved.