1 / 36

Extinction Cultures:

Extinction Cultures:. Art Ethics Biodiversity. Charles Willson Peale (1741 – 1827), “The Artist in His Museum” (1822). American Incognitum. Charles Willson Peale, “The Artist in His Museum” (1822). Extinction.

anahid
Télécharger la présentation

Extinction Cultures:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extinction Cultures: Art Ethics Biodiversity

  2. Charles Willson Peale (1741 – 1827), “The Artist in His Museum” (1822)

  3. American Incognitum Charles Willson Peale, “The Artist in His Museum” (1822)

  4. Extinction • 1796 paper showed that living & fossil elephants were distinct species (not linear descent) • Thus: extinction is real • “All of these facts, consistent among themselves, and not opposed by any report, seem to me to prove the existence of a world previous to ours, destroyed by some kind of catastrophe.” Georges Cuvier (1769 – 1832)

  5. Portraits Bald Eagle Mastodon Wild Turkey Charles Willson Peale, “The Artist in His Museum” (1822)

  6. Biodiversity Extinction Charles Willson Peale, “The Artist in His Museum” (1822)

  7. Biodiversity Climate Change Extinction

  8. Biodiversity Climate Change Human Population Growth Extinction

  9. Biodiversity Climate Change Human Population Growth Invasive Species Habitat Degradation & Fragmentation Extinction

  10. Biodiversity Climate Change Human Population Growth Invasive Species Habitat Degradation & Fragmentation Over-exploitation & Monoculture Extinction

  11. Biodiversity Climate Change Human Population Growth Culture Invasive Species Habitat Degradation & Fragmentation Over-exploitation & Monoculture Extinction

  12. Biodiversity • From mid-1980’s

  13. Biodiversity • Coined by Walter G. Rosen (National Research Council) • National Forum on BioDiversity(Washington, D.C. Sept 21-24 1986)

  14. Biodiversity • “In 1988, biodiversity did not appear as a keyword in Biological Abstracts, and biological diversity appeared once. • In 1993, biodiversity appeared seventy-two times, and biological diversity nineteen times. • David Takacs, The Idea of Biodiversity (1996: 39)

  15. Biodiversity • U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity signed at Earth Summit (Rio 1992)

  16. Biodiversity • U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity signed at Earth Summit (Rio 1992) • International Year of Biodiversity (2010) • Decade of Biodiversity (2011-2020)

  17. Biodiversity • Key concept for emerging field of conservation biology • “Conservation biology is the scientific study of the nature and status of Earth’s biodiversity with the aim of protecting species, their habitats and ecosystems from excessive rates of extinction” (Wikipedia)

  18. Biodiversity • Key concept for emerging field of conservation biology • “Conservation biology is the scientific study of the nature and status of Earth’s biodiversity with the aim of protecting species, their habitats and ecosystems from excessive rates of extinction” (Wikipedia) • “A discipline with a deadline” (Michael Soulé)

  19. Biodiversity • Core task = calculation of number of existing species & rates/risks of extinction

  20. Biodiversity • Core task = calculation of number of existing species & rates/risks of extinction • No. of species? • Ca. 1.8 million known • 5 – 10 million?

  21. Biodiversity • Core task = calculation of number of existing species & rates/risks of extinction • No. of species? • Ca. 1.8 million known • 5 – 10 million? • E.O. Wilson (1993) estimated loss of more than “30,000 species/year – 3 every hour

  22. Biodiversity • Core task = calculation of number of existing species & rates/risks of extinction • No. of species? • Ca. 1.8 million known • 5 – 10 million? • E.O. Wilson (1993) estimated loss of more than “30,000 species/year – 3 every hour • Wilson (2002): 30 – 50% of all living species may be lost by 2100

  23. Biodiversity • “Each specimen in a museum is a data set of useful information.” • Leslie J. Mehrhoff, “Museums, Research Collections and the Biodiversity Challenge” in Biodiversity II (1997)

  24. Extinction • Species loss comparable to “mass extinction events” from fossil record

  25. Extinction • “Hope is a duty from which paleontologists are exempt” (David Quammen, “Planet of Weeds”)

  26. Extinction • “Hope is a duty from which paleontologists are exempt” (David Quammen, “Planet of Weeds”) • 99% of all species that have ever existed are extinct

  27. Extinction • The extinction crisis—the race to save the composition, structure, and organization of biodiversity as it exists today—is over, and we have lost. • --Stephen M. Meyer (2006)

  28. Extinction • Being distracted and self-absorbed, as is our nature, we have not yet fully understood what we are doing. But future generations, with endless time to reflect, will understand it all, and in painful detail. As awareness grows, so will their sense of loss. There will be thousands of ivory-billed woodpeckers to think about in the centuries and millennia to come. (Wilson 2002:5)

  29. Isabella Kirkland “Taxa (Gone)”

  30. Maya Lin, “What Is Missing?” website/project “My last memorial”

  31. Companion Species? • “How can food security for everybody (not just for the rich, who can forget how important cheap and abundant food is) and multispecies coflourishing be linked in practice? … Much collaborative and inventive work is underway on these matters, if only we take touch seriously” (Donna Haraway)

  32. Companion Species? • “I do long for an idiom that considers multispecies flourishing outside the idiom and apparatus of “Saving the Endangered _________” • Species as “messmates” • Not isolated, but interrelated • How to eat well together?

  33. ArtWorks for Change Traveling ExhibitField Museum May – Dec 2012

More Related