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The works span the centuries, from skeletons enacting a triumphant Dance of Death in the 1493 "Nuremberg Chronicle"
-- one of the earliest printed books -- to Rembrandt prints and sculptures by contemporary artists. These include "In the Eyes of Others," a huge chandelier made from 3,000 plaster bones by British artist Jodie Carey, and John Isaacs' "Are You Still Mad at Me?"
-- a not-for-the squeamish sculpture of a decayed and partially dismembered body. Forde senses a resurgent interest in death among today's artists -- just think of Damien Hirst, with his rotting animal carcasses and diamond-encrusted skull. She suggests it may be a product of Western society's desire to tidy death away. "In Western secular culture, death happens offstage, in private. It's medicalized and professionalized. Only a century back, death would have been at home," she said. "I do think we have lost some vocabulary of talking about it
-- talking about mourning and contemplating mortality." Art, she says, can help remind us that "death is part of life and not simply a void into which we drop." Harris says he does not know the value of his collection, which numbers some 2,000 items and is still growing. His latest purchase, sadly not on display in London, is a 1969 Chevrolet Impala adorned with Day of the Dead motifs. "My wife," he said, "has been very understanding and very patient." He hopes to take his collection on tour around the world. "All the world needs, in my mind, to promote the conversation and the dialogue about death," he said. "It is an event that is going to happen to all of us, whether we like it or not." ___
[Associated
Press;
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