Dyson College of Arts and Sciences

Digestive Systems: Fall 2020 Exhibition

Dyson College of Arts and Sciences

Issue link: http://dysoncollege.uberflip.com/i/1251468

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 6 of 19

EcoArtTech underscores that our ecosystem is infinitely more complex and teeming with life than it may initially appear. Consequently, their work urges viewers to value the full spectrum of Earth's living beings. For the health of the planet and all of its inhabitants, Nadir and Adams Peppermint offer concrete strategies by which technology can be used to cultivate a stronger human connection to nature rather than perpetuating its continued use to isolate humans from the environment of which they are an intrinsic part. Like EcoArtTech, Maria McKinney makes evident what was previously unseeable and therefore unknowable. Based on her collaboration with scientists and farmers at a stud farm, the artist presents a selection of photographs from her Sire series which draws poetic parallels between ancient fertility rituals and contemporary genetic breeding techniques. The photographs, each featuring a side view of an impressively corpulent bull alongside a much smaller human handler, are reminiscent of British livestock paintings from the 1800s that celebrated the wealth of the owner and promoted the virility of the animal. However, while similar compositionally, McKinney's bovine subjects look directly at the viewer, conveying the undeniable power of their individual lifeforce. Additionally, in each formal portrait, the bull carries a sculpture of its own genomic structure or economic breeding index that the artist has constructed out of brightly colored artificial insemination straws. Quite literally, the once unexplained inner magic of life and regeneration is revealed externally. McKinney handweaves her contemporary plastic objects using the traditional patterns and craft techniques that were used in pre-Christian Ireland to create fertility dolls out of the harvest's final hay straw. In doing so, she effectively draws the connection between past and present human efforts to control nature to ensure ample food production. 3

Articles in this issue

view archives of Dyson College of Arts and Sciences - Digestive Systems: Fall 2020 Exhibition