DocumentCode
3069082
Title
Sculpture Meets Ecological Science: Marijana Tadic´s Wandering Albatross Exhibitions and the Concept of Philopatry
Author
Nicholls, Christine
Author_Institution
Flinders Univ., Adelaide, SA, Australia
fYear
2011
fDate
13-15 July 2011
Firstpage
414
Lastpage
419
Abstract
The concept of philopatry is most often applied to animal, bird and insect populations. As such, it is closely connected to the disciplines of zoology, animal science, behavioural ecology and non-human genetics. Only rarely (in reality, almost never) is this concept deployed in relation to human population movement. Yet, as a result of colonisation, globalisation, intermarriage, wars, political unrest and other diasporic forces, increasing numbers of migrants and asylum seekers now settle in places far away from their countries of birth. Travel, often involving long distances back and forth between people´s adoptive and natal homelands, and frequently taking place on a repetitive, seasonal, basis, has become a significant contemporary phenomenon. In the Yugoslav-born, Australian conceptual sculptor Marijana Tadic´s recent installation and sculptural exhibitions, collectively titled Wandering Albatross, exhibited in South Australia February-March 2011, the artist has appropriated the concept of philopatry, applying it to ideas about contemporary patterns of migrancy with thrilling conceptual and aesthetic results.
Keywords
art; environmental science computing; zoology; Marijana Tadic wandering albatross exhibition; South Australia; animal science; behavioural ecology; diasporic forces; ecological science; philopatry concept; sculpture; zoology; Art; Australia; Birds; Humans; Needles; Visualization; Sculpture; Wandering Albatross; migrancy; philopatry; visual art;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Visualisation (IV), 2011 15th International Conference on
Conference_Location
London
ISSN
1550-6037
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0868-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IV.2011.105
Filename
6004075
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