Katherine Enright
@katherinenright.bsky.social
130 followers 120 following 16 posts
PhD candidate @ Faculty of History and University Museum of Zoology, Cambridge Reading & writing about 19-20th c. botany, zoology, and other expeditionary sciences in SEA 🇸🇬 she/her https://www.hist.cam.ac.uk/people/katherine-enright
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katherinenright.bsky.social
Thrilled with this news! And what an honour to be part of the curatorial team behind this exhibition
bshsnews.bsky.social
🎉 Congratulations to the joint winner of the BSHS Exhibiting Excellence Prize 2024 (Large Exhibition Category): Measuring Difference @ Harvard’s Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments.
A bilingual exhibition showing Latin America as a space of scientific innovation, 🧵
A banner summarising the content of the post, including a picture of the exhibition
katherinenright.bsky.social
These classes both look wonderful, your students are lucky! If you wouldn't mind sending, I'd love to see the syllabi.
katherinenright.bsky.social
Had a truly wonderful time sharing about Mohamed Haniff (1872-1930) and his botanical collecting through herbarium sheets @ Forest Learning Centre, Perdana Botanic Gardens KL - huge thank you to the team there and to the Sunda Shelves bookstore!
Author is pointing at a slide featuring three herbarium sheets
katherinenright.bsky.social
Guide to the now-defunct Natural History Gallery at the National Museum of Malaysia (Muzium Negara), 1979 -- from the personal collection of Abdul Nasir Halim (1938-1999), who made these amazing dioramas (Perpustakaan ATMA, UKM)
Cover page in yellow of Natural History Gallery: A Brief Guide Black and white photographs of a mangrove swamp diorama and a tiger diorama Black and white photographs of edible mangrove crab above and underwater coral diorama below Black and white photographs of a pangolin diorama above and a diorama of primates of Malaysia below
katherinenright.bsky.social
Excited to be part of this great line up of natural history talks and walks at the Forest Learning Centre, Perdana Botanic Gardens, KL later this month!
katherinenright.bsky.social
Palm Practices, a collaboration between Jelai Asli Craft, a Semai weaving collective from Pahang, and Gerimis Art, Malaysia, on display at GMBB in KL. Pictured is my favourite pattern, with a delightful name: ekor tenggiling, or pangolin's tail
entrance to the palm practices exhibit with introductory text panel to the left Introductory text about the Jelai Asli Craft weaving group Pictures of 9 weaving patterns with their motifs and meanings Two examples of palm weaving
katherinenright.bsky.social
Naturhistorisk Museum Aarhus: Amidst charismatic mammals and danish wildflowers, unassuming crustacean specimens offer a glimpse of Denmark's scientific endeavors in Southeast Asia: one from Penang, first Galathea Expedition, 1846 & a jar from Ban Kao, Thai-Danish Prehistoric Expedition, 1961.
katherinenright.bsky.social
Edita Atmaja's 'Crux Anônumos' features assemblages of urban plant life growing everyday, perhaps unexpected places
katherinenright.bsky.social
Did you know you can make paper from pandan leaves? Widi Pangestu's 'Paper Anthology' presents notes and experiments in paper-making from Southeast Asian plants, inviting viewers to touch, feel, and explore
katherinenright.bsky.social
A stunning installation by Indah Arsyad, about pollution in Indonesia's waterways. Yes: those are green mussel lines, hanging down from jerry cans suspended from the ceiling
katherinenright.bsky.social
Some highlights from an absolutely fantastic ArtJog 2025, the annual art festival in Jogjakarta:

first up, two prints from Agung Pramana's series 'Looting Back the Shadow Puppets' (2025) - the puppets escaping, video-game style, from the floor plan of the British Museum
Reposted by Katherine Enright
trincolllibcam.bsky.social
These beautiful pressed seaweeds are the work of 19th-century botanist Amelia Griffiths. Sent to Dawson Turner, writer of 𝘚𝘺𝘯𝘰𝘱𝘴𝘪𝘴 𝘰𝘧 𝘉𝘳𝘪𝘵𝘪𝘴𝘩 𝘍𝘶𝘤𝘪, around 1808, this volume is currently on display as part of our exhibition 𝘐𝘯 𝘏𝘦𝘳 𝘌𝘭𝘦𝘮𝘦𝘯𝘵: 𝘚𝘵𝘰𝘳𝘪𝘦𝘴 𝘰𝘧 𝘚𝘤𝘪𝘦𝘯𝘤𝘦’𝘴 𝘍𝘦𝘮𝘢𝘭𝘦 𝘛𝘳𝘢𝘪𝘭𝘣𝘭𝘢𝘻𝘦𝘳𝘴.
Letter from Amelia Griffiths containing four specimens of seaweed pressed and pasted onto a sheet in a variety of shades of pink and maroon. Her scrawl contains descriptions of locations an characteristics of her findings. Second leaf of a letter from Amelia Griffiths containing 3 sections of a  seaweed specimen pressed and pasted onto a sheet alongside her writing.
katherinenright.bsky.social
Had a wonderful time learning and sharing at the History of Medicine in Southeast Asia conference in Jogjakarta!
katherinenright.bsky.social
First post here! Happy to share my brilliant friend @tanvidg.bsky.social's reporting on funding for climate initiatives in the bay area