[01:15.41]I have just shown you all some slides of a very varied set of paintings .I noticed, as I was showing the slides, a few giggles in the audience and a few looks of dismay.
[01:26.49]I guess, entitling my lecture 'Unconventional Art Geniuses' was a bit misleading. When most of you were looking at the frankly basic colour use and rather primitive painting techniques, you probably were more than a little surprised.
[01:41.99]Well... I have a shock for you all. What I'm about to tell you next will help you understand the title of my lecture.
[01:49.27]All the slides I showed you previously are of artworks made by... wait for it... animals! Yes, I heard a few gasps In the audience when I said that.
[01:59.67]Whilst the artwork would be definitely primitive by human standards, when you consider that the artworks were executed by animals, then, well, they are frankly staggering!
[02:10.17]Nor were the artworks purely the work of our closest relatives, the apes. No, they were produced by animal artists, drawn from a diverse pool of species, ranging from elephants to gorillas, birds and even sloths!
[02:23.89]In fact, in recognition of this, last year, London's Grant Museum of Zoology staged what organisers thought was the first Inter-species show of paintings by animals.
[02:35.17]In the show, art was shown from an orangutan, a gorilla and an elephant.
[02:41.09]Whilst the gorilla and the orangutan produced works that bore a resemblance to the paintings of modern artists de Kooning and Kline, the elephant's work took a more Q35 figurative approach in the rendering of a flower pot.
[02:54.57]Now before you all go thinking this is a revolutionary discovery, I would like to put the record straight. The contribution animals can make to the art world was highlighted as far back as the 1950s.
[03:07.02]In this decade, Desmond Morris, celebrated social anthropologist and author of bestsellers, such as 'Bodywatching' and 'The Naked Ape', Introduced Congo the painting chimp to the British public in a TV appearance.
[03:22.46]Back then, animal art-makers were regarded as little more than a novelty.
[03:27.51]Today, however, animal artists are not viewed so much as novelties but as sophisticated creators with skills and senses that they use to execute artworks in ways humans never can.
[03:39.47]As a result of animals being taken more seriously as creators of art, it has become commonplace today for zoos to provide materials to captive animals.
[03:49.01]The hope is that by giving animals the means to create art, they will be kept physically and mentally stimulated. Obviously you can't give a lizard a paintbrush and expect it to draw!
[04:00.05]What the zookeepers do, though, is to give animals species appropriate art materials and tools. For example, sloth bears, who feed by blowing away dirt from the forest floor to feed on termites, have been given a straw-like apparatus to blow paint onto a canvas.
[04:18.40]What is one of the most interesting discoveries to come out of all this, though, is the finding that animals voluntarily and Instinctively participate in the creation of art.
[04:28.28]It seems therefore that animals derive as much pleasure as humans do in applying paint to canvas or making a clay or plasticine figure.
[04:36.91]The obvious conclusion to draw from all this Is that there are more similarities between Man and other animals than some of us might care to admit.
[04:45.47]However, just to satisfy the sceptics amongst you, there is something I would like to add. So far, the primate and elephant art that has been produced often bears an uncanny resemblance to Western art.
[04:58.71]Certain conventions are evident In the animals' art that suggests a degree of human intervention.
[05:04.55]As proof of this, an elephant named Boon Mee was actually guided by a keeper who steered the animal's trunk to paint brushstrokes on a canvas!
[05:14.37]Nevertheless, we should keep an Q40 open mind about animal art as there are just as many examples of artworks that have been completed by animals without human aid.
Complete the notes below.
Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
Animal Art Despite the rather animal paintings are nevertheless impressive.
However, such artworks are considered rather primitive.
Whilst we might expect apes, to have some artistic talent, otheranimal species do, too.
Recently, an inter-species exhibition of animal art was held such a phenomenon.
Animals, though, tend to adopt an abstract rather than a to art.
Complete the sentences below.
Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.
Today, animal artists are no longer such 36 as they once were.
Art equipment and tools need to be species- 37 in order for animals to be creative.
It would seem that Man and animals share 38 than at first thought.
Some animal artworks may, however, be the result of 39
Sceptics are probably best advised, though, to maintain an 40 when it comes to animal art.