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Opium and Empire: A Live, Online, Zoom Lecture and Show and Tell with Antiques Dealer and Star of TV’s Oddities Evan Michelson

Time: 7 pm EDT
Admission: $ 8 - Tickets HERE

This lecture will take place virtually, via Zoom. Ticket sales will end at 5 pm EDT the day of the lecture. Attendees may request a video recording AFTER the lecture takes place by emailing proof of purchase to info.morbidanatomy@gmail.com. Video recordings are valid for 30 days after the date of the lecture.

Ticketholders: a link to the conference is sent out at 5:30 pm EDT on the day of the event to the email used at checkout. Please add info.morbidanatomy@gmail.com to your contacts to ensure that the event link will not go to spam.

PLEASE NOTE: This lecture will be recorded and available for free for our Patreon members at $5/above. Become a Member HERE.

For thousands of years humans have been unable to resist opium’s narcotic allure. Wars have been fought over it. Countless lives have been ruined and lost. Narcotics have been influencing our health, our culture and our politics for centuries in ways both subtle and well-known.

But narcotics have another fascinating and esoteric story to tell. In the days before government regulation, pharmaceutical narcotics like opium, heroin and morphine played a common part in our everyday lives, but their presence wasn’t always acknowledged, their potency wasn’t always admitted, and their effects weren’t always understood. Evan Michelson will share some of the rarest pharmaceuticals in her personal collection and recount some of the lesser-known stories about opiates and the people who loved them, the people who exploited them, and the people who feared them.

Evan Michelson is an antiques dealer, collector, lecturer and award-winning curator. She was co-owner of New York City’s iconic Obscura Antiques and Oddities for 24 years, and co-star of the popular TV series “Oddities” which ran for five seasons on Discovery Science. Evan helped spearhead the reintroduction of cabinets of curiosity to the culture at large, and she has long been at the forefront of death culture and the melancholy sublime.

As Morbid Anatomy Scholar-in-Residence Evan has lectured widely on such subjects as the history of gothic culture and the enigmatic Saddest Object in the World. These days she is still on the road, accumulating esoteric objects and stories to tell.

Evan is currently the owner of Obscura West, located in Lambertville, NJ.

Image: Albert de Matignon, Le vampire de l’opium, 1911