The Owls Are Not What They Seem: Artist as Ethologist

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Toward a posthumanist art and ethology

The Owls Are Not What They Seem is a selective history of modern and contemporary engagements with animals in the visual arts and how these explorations relate to the evolution of scientific knowledge regarding animals. Arnaud Gerspacher argues that artistic knowledge, with its experimental nature, ability to contain contradictions, and more capacious understanding of truth-claims, presents a valuable supplement to scientific knowledge when it comes to encountering and existing alongside nonhuman animals and life worlds. 

Though critical of art works involving animals that are unreflective and exploitative, Gerspacher’s exploration of aesthetic practices by Allora & Calzadilla, Pierre Huyghe, Agnieszka Kurant, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Martin Roth, David Weber-Krebs, and others suggests that, alongside scientific practices, art has much to offer in revealing the otherworldly qualities of animals and forging ecopolitical solidarities with fellow earthlings.

Author(s): Arnaud Gerspacher
Series: Forerunners: Ideas First
Publisher: University Of Minnesota Press
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 112
City: Minneapolis

Cover
Half Title Page
Series List
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Preface
Introduction: Some Donkeys, a Stuffed Monkey, and the Animal Factishe
Ethology and Art: Modernist Behaviorists and Avant-Garde Field Aesthetics
Step 1: Deconditioning Animality (Still Humanist in Certain Regards)
Step 2: Nonhuman Worlds (Entering Posthumanism)
Step 3: Zoopolitics (A Political Critical Ethology)
Acknowledgments
About the Author