
I opened this photo and stopped breathing. It's just sensational. This is from the Brno Ossuary located in Brno, Czech Republic. Only rediscovered in 2001 during an archaeological dig, the Brno Ossuary is 800 years old and holds the remains of some 50,000 people. It's second only to the Paris catacombs. The Brno Ossuary is currently being restored and it's not even open to the public yet. So Dr. Koudounaris' photography gives us a rare look at a world few living people have entered.
One of my favorite people, Dr. Paul Koudounaris, author of The Empire of Death: A Cultural History of Ossuaries and Charnel Houses, has a new photography exhibit coming up in San Francisco’s Articulated Gallery from June 2 to June 28. The exhibit includes large-scale prints of photos from the book and photos from his upcoming book, Heavenly Creatures. Heavenly Creatures continues Dr. Koudounaris’ study of ossuaries with a specific focus on seventeenth-century, jewel-encrusted skeleton relics from Switzerland and Germany. I’m obsessed with all things bedazzled and macabre. Needless to say, there aren’t words for how excited I am about Heavenly Creatures and I’ve been relishing every sneak peak.
Every time I look at Dr. Koudounaris’ photos of bone structures I’m transported to a different world where people had a much more active and reverential relationship with the dead. The photos are beautiful and provocative and if you have the opportunity to see them blown up you should take it and treat your senses.

This skeleton, on display in Waldsassen, Germany, is one of a collection of Christian martyrs who were exhumed from the Rome catacombs in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and then dressed in ornate precious stones and robes.

Another ossuary in the Czech Republic, the famous Sedlec Ossuary, features the incredible bone chandelier. Incorporating at least one of every human bone, the chandelier hangs in the middle of the church.

Chiesa dei Morti in Urbania, Italy, has eighteen mummies on display behind the altar. Gathered by the Brotherhood of Good Death, the mummies were naturally created by a mold that sucked all the moisture out of their bodies. Disturbingly, the one on the left is thought to have been buried alive.

The Skull Chapel in Czermna, Poland was built in 1776 by parish priest Wacław Tomaszek and a local grave digger. I like to think the priest had piratical leanings, as a lot of the designs feature cross bone motifs.

This Plague Crucifix stands in a Charnel House in Leuk, Switzerland. It's gruesome, but the exaggerated lesions were actually meant to serve as a comfort to victims of skin diseases by linking them to the sufferings of Christ.

This mummified monk served in the Capuchin Order which took vows of poverty, charity and obedience. He stands in the Crypt of the Monastery of Santa Maria Della Concezione in Rome, Italy

This is the Skeleton of Saint Pancratius at the Church of Saint Nikolaus in Wil, Switzerland. His dazzling suit of armor was commissioned in 1777, to celebrate the centenary of the Saint's arrival in Wil.
Articulated Gallery is inside Loved to Death on Haight Street in San Francisco, which is a great space for any fans of the dark side of life. If you don’t have Dr. Paul Koudounaris’ book, The Empire of Death: A Cultural History of Ossuaries and Charnel Houses, yet, you are missing out! You can learn more about Dr. Koudounaris here.








































































