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Galapagos (Paperback, New ed.)
Sian Ede; Edited by Sian Ede, Bergit Arends; Contributions by Richard A. Fortey, Greg Hilty, …
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R295
Discovery Miles 2 950
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Galapagos archipelago in the Pacific Ocean is a place of
extraordinary biodiversity, home to species found nowhere else on
Earth and synonymous with the discoveries of Charles Darwin. But it
is also a place of competing interests: those of the rare animals
and plants, the scientists who are trying to conserve them, the
settlers from Ecuador seeking a way to support themselves, and the
tourists who travel across the world to encounter the astonishing
environment. Galapagos is the result of a five-year artists'
residency programme set up by the Galapagos Conservation Trust,
working with the Charles Darwin Foundation, as a unique way of
highlighting some of the complex issues that relate to the islands.
Twelve international artists were invited to engage with the
Galapagos on their own terms, to mix with the local and the
scientific communities, to find inspiration for original new work
and eventually to share it with a wide audience. The artworks and
essays in this book prompt comparisons with other places in the
world that are beset by multiple demands. Artists: Jyll Bradley,
Paulo Catrica, Filipa Cesar, Marcus Coates, Dorothy Cross
(accompanied by Fiona Shaw), Alexis Deacon, Jeremy Deller, Tania
Kovats, Kaffe Matthews, Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman and Joe
Gerhardt) and Alison Turnbull.
The Galapagos archipelago in the Pacific Ocean is a place of
extraordinary biodiversity, home to species found nowhere else on
Earth and synonymous with the discoveries of Charles Darwin. But it
is also a place of competing interests: those of the rare animals
and plants, the scientists who are trying to conserve them, the
settlers from Ecuador seeking a way to support themselves, and the
tourists who travel across the world to encounter the astonishing
environment. Galapagos is the result of a five-year artists'
residency programme set up by the Galapagos Conservation Trust,
working with the Charles Darwin Foundation, as a unique way of
highlighting some of the complex issues that relate to the islands.
Twelve international artists were invited to engage with the
Galapagos on their own terms, to mix with the local and the
scientific communities, to find inspiration for original new work
and eventually to share it with a wide audience. The artworks and
essays in this book prompt comparisons with other places in the
world that are beset by multiple demands. Artists: Jyll Bradley,
Paulo Catrica, Filipa Cesar, Marcus Coates, Dorothy Cross
(accompanied by Fiona Shaw), Alexis Deacon, Jeremy Deller, Tania
Kovats, Kaffe Matthews, Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman and Joe
Gerhardt) and Alison Turnbull. With texts by award-winning science
writer Richard Fortey, curators Bergit Arends and Greg Hilty,
Felipe Cruz of the Charles Darwin Foundation, and actor and
director Fiona Shaw.
The Galapagos archipelago in the Pacific Ocean is a place of
extraordinary biodiversity, home to species found nowhere else on
Earth and synonymous with the discoveries of Charles Darwin. But it
is also a place of competing interests: those of the rare animals
and plants, the scientists who are trying to conserve them, the
settlers from Ecuador seeking a way to support themselves, and the
tourists who travel across the world to encounter the astonishing
environment. Galapagos is the result of a five-year artists'
residency programme set up by the Galapagos Conservation Trust,
working with the Charles Darwin Foundation, as a unique way of
highlighting some of the complex issues that relate to the islands.
Twelve international artists were invited to engage with the
Galapagos on their own terms, to mix with the local and the
scientific communities, to find inspiration for original new work
and eventually to share it with a wide audience. The artworks and
essays in this book prompt comparisons with other places in the
world that are beset by multiple demands. Artists: Jyll Bradley,
Paulo Catrica, Filipa Cesar, Marcus Coates, Dorothy Cross
(accompanied by Fiona Shaw), Alexis Deacon, Jeremy Deller, Tania
Kovats, Kaffe Matthews, Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman and Joe
Gerhardt) and Alison Turnbull.
Is science the new art? Scientists weave incredible stories, invent
wild hypotheses and ask difficult questions about the meaning of
life. They have insights into the workings of our bodies and minds
which challenge the myths we make about our identities and selves.
They create visual images, models and scenarios that are gruesome,
baffling or beguiling. They say and do things that are ethically
and politically shocking. Contemporary scientists frequently talk
about 'beauty' and 'elegance'; artists hardly ever do. While
demonstrating how science is affecting the creation and
interpretation of contemporary art, this book proposes that
artistic insights are as important on their own terms as those in
science and that we can and should accommodate both forms of
knowledge. Featuring the work of artists such as Damien Hirst,
Christine Borland, Bill Viola and Helen Chadwick, and art-science
collaborative ventures involving Dorothy Cross, Eduardo Kac and
Stelarc, it looks at the way new scientific explanations for the
nature of human consciousness can influence our interpretation of
art, at the squeamish interventions being produced by artists
relishing in new technologies and at art which takes on the dangers
facing the fragile environment. Seeing the world from the other
point of view can inform the practice of both sides - this book
will provide new insights to artists, scientists and the wider
public.
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