Vol. 41 No. 1, issue 159 on HUMAN/NATURE

Vol. 41 No. 1, issue 159 on HUMAN/NATURE

Border Crossings

Mark Dion, Tar and Feathers-Flamingo (detail), 2019. Flamingo sculpture, tar, small precious objects, trash can, crate, 190.5 x 76.2 x 63.5 cm. Courtesy the artist and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York/Los Angeles. 

June 1, 2022
Vol. 41 No. 1, issue 159 on HUMAN/NATURE
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We are imperilled through our greed and lack of attention. We have separated ourselves from the full spectrum of the natural world, establishing, in our arrogance, a hierarchy that has placed us at the top instead of as part of a continuum of plants, animals, birds, insects, streams and fishes that are the world.

For the well-being of all, can we re-enter the dance, can we re-engage with the grasses as only one of multitudes and properly value the remarkable phenomenon of the honey bee? Can we partake and not consume, can we build a shelter that keeps us warm, where we can welcome friends and not sequester it as a financial hedge against the future?

In this issue of Border Crossings the conversation begins with Giovanni Aloi, a writer and curator whose subject is nature and its representation in art. He teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and can be teacher to us all. The awe and spectacle of natural history dioramas, the currently contested place of taxidermy in art are at the core of his engagement.

Artist Mark Dion has, for four decades researched and produced work in what could be described as the field of animal ontology. In the interview in this issue he speaks about the range of his art and his newest work, titled the “Theatre of Extinction”. Grim entertainment plays out in that theatre, tempered always by his application of wry humour.

The interdisciplinary Indigenous art collective Postcommodity—Cristósbal Martinez and Kade L Twist—are unswerving in their insistence that we read the made world around us through a post-colonial lens. We won’t be proud of the damage we’ve done and their art installations are stunning carriers of this evidence.

Two Portfolios in this issue speak to human nature. One is the ephemeral graphite drawings by Lorraine Simms of the shadows of the bones of animals extant and extinct, displayed in the American Museum of Natural History. The other is the heartbreakingly lovely photographic portraits by Barbara Steinman of roses as they fade.

Philosopher Mark Kingwell, in his astute and beguiling essay, “Nature and Normativity” reminds us of our ready fallibility in asserting an exclusive status. He writes,” Even creativity is not subject to human monopoly; primates can paint, and algorithms can compose music.”

In this issue where the subject is insoluble, entwined human nature, look for: Edward Burtynsky’s startling and lyric photographs from his series, “Natural Order”; nichola feldman-kiss’s bodies of work; Stephen Horne’s investigation of art as breath; Barry Schwabsky’s column on new photographers’ books; Jacques-Louis David’s political works considered by David Carrier; Buffy Sainte-Marie; Rashid Johnson; Thomas Hirschhorn; Derek Liddington; Alvin Luong; documentary filmmaker Jennifer Baichwal’s “ Into the Weeds: Dewayne “Lee” Johnson vs. Monsanto Company” and very many others.

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Border Crossings
June 1, 2022

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