Starting with an image, published in London in 1822, of the interior of a South African house decorated with paintings of wild animals, this paper explores how to approach evidence for precolonial artistic practices unlike those documented by later ethnographers. Working backwards from the published image, using Gell’s notion of the art nexus, to the paintings encountered at Kaditshwene in May 1820 by the missionary traveller John Campbell, this paper explores what depictions of non-human animals tell us about related ontological understandings, suggesting that these understandings were significantly transformed by the large-scale exploitation of wild animals during the colonial period
Keywords: Animalisierung, Einfühlung, Ethology, Expressionism, Painting, German Modernism In this st...
This is a revised extract from a co-authored book, Environment and Empire (OUP, 2007). In this artic...
My thesis is a textual, historical and visual analysis of animal figures in pictures. Three figures ...
The depiction of exotic wild animals by British artists during the nineteenth century can be related...
Animal painting is a critically important part of Australian art history, yet it has been afforded s...
The presentation of my thesis comprises the Studio Practice component (66%) which takes the form of ...
The second half of the 19th century was flooded with depictions of hybrids of man and animal. This t...
This study investigates the development between 1550 to 1630 of Southern Netherlandish animal imag...
With earlier origins and a rebirth in the late 1990s, the New Animisms and the precipitate ‘ontologi...
The project has involved the production of artworks that explore our relationship to 'farm' animals ...
This paper develops a cultural critique of the zoo as an institution that inscribes various human st...
This art practice-based thesis addresses the question: how might certain kinds of photographic and m...
The Ghanaian philosopher, Kwasi Wiredu described contemporary Africans as living ‘in a cultural flux...
Animal and sporting pictures were a major part of British art in the late eighteenth to the early ni...
M.Tech.The landscape of South Africa has changed dramatically since early colonisation. Even so, it ...
Keywords: Animalisierung, Einfühlung, Ethology, Expressionism, Painting, German Modernism In this st...
This is a revised extract from a co-authored book, Environment and Empire (OUP, 2007). In this artic...
My thesis is a textual, historical and visual analysis of animal figures in pictures. Three figures ...
The depiction of exotic wild animals by British artists during the nineteenth century can be related...
Animal painting is a critically important part of Australian art history, yet it has been afforded s...
The presentation of my thesis comprises the Studio Practice component (66%) which takes the form of ...
The second half of the 19th century was flooded with depictions of hybrids of man and animal. This t...
This study investigates the development between 1550 to 1630 of Southern Netherlandish animal imag...
With earlier origins and a rebirth in the late 1990s, the New Animisms and the precipitate ‘ontologi...
The project has involved the production of artworks that explore our relationship to 'farm' animals ...
This paper develops a cultural critique of the zoo as an institution that inscribes various human st...
This art practice-based thesis addresses the question: how might certain kinds of photographic and m...
The Ghanaian philosopher, Kwasi Wiredu described contemporary Africans as living ‘in a cultural flux...
Animal and sporting pictures were a major part of British art in the late eighteenth to the early ni...
M.Tech.The landscape of South Africa has changed dramatically since early colonisation. Even so, it ...
Keywords: Animalisierung, Einfühlung, Ethology, Expressionism, Painting, German Modernism In this st...
This is a revised extract from a co-authored book, Environment and Empire (OUP, 2007). In this artic...
My thesis is a textual, historical and visual analysis of animal figures in pictures. Three figures ...