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The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment

Extinctions and biodiversity loss in the age of the Anthropocene are closely related to speciesist attitudes and a lack of care for nonhuman species. This thesis is an examination of relational art practice and conversation as tools to encourage empathy and care for nonhuman species in urban environ...

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Main Author: Grobler, Nicola
Other Authors: Langerman, Fritha
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Michaelis School of Fine Art 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Grobler, Nicola
author2 Langerman, Fritha
author_browse Grobler, Nicola
Langerman, Fritha
author_facet Langerman, Fritha
Grobler, Nicola
author_sort Grobler, Nicola
collection Thesis
description Extinctions and biodiversity loss in the age of the Anthropocene are closely related to speciesist attitudes and a lack of care for nonhuman species. This thesis is an examination of relational art practice and conversation as tools to encourage empathy and care for nonhuman species in urban environments, here specifically performed in the City of Tshwane/Pretoria. The thesis focus is predominately on non-reciprocal multispecies relationships between humans and wild and semi-wild species that occur in urban ecosystems. Cartesian dualism has conditioned humans to objectify and “other” nonhuman species, and in identifying this problem, this study examines representations of nonhuman species in natural history museums, where the categorical separation of human and nonhuman species is maintained through a static, hierarchical taxonomic narrative. This is demonstrated in a case study of the Ditsong National Museum of Natural History in Tshwane. Whilst much scientific research has shifted towards a recognition of emerging and entangled organisms in multispecies assemblages, this study argues that the didactic method of natural history museums and other forms of public biological science deny a nuanced and horizontal relationship with nonhuman species. Through creative practice, the argument is made that an alternative mode of experience and understanding can allow for more caring and empathetic relationships with nonhuman species. The Visitor Centre was devised as a mobile hub with which to engage the public through the close consideration of constructed art objects that sparked conversations about urban nonhuman species. Assemblage and relational aesthetics were employed as creative methods that, through the phenomenological and dialogical workings of The Visitor Centre, were used to unsettle the limitations of species-specific categories by human design. By means of anthropomorphism and storytelling, the artwork brought forth considerations of nonhuman species as subjects, facilitating the emotional and empathetic responses that followed. In this research, both the impact of the conversations of the participants and the artist-researcher's multiple roles as creator, witness, listener, interlocutor and audience are made evident and are acknowledged as key strategies in the formation of this alternative space of relationship making.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:57.328Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Michaelis School of Fine Art
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35620 The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment Grobler, Nicola Langerman, Fritha Anderson, Pippin Fine Art Extinctions and biodiversity loss in the age of the Anthropocene are closely related to speciesist attitudes and a lack of care for nonhuman species. This thesis is an examination of relational art practice and conversation as tools to encourage empathy and care for nonhuman species in urban environments, here specifically performed in the City of Tshwane/Pretoria. The thesis focus is predominately on non-reciprocal multispecies relationships between humans and wild and semi-wild species that occur in urban ecosystems. Cartesian dualism has conditioned humans to objectify and “other” nonhuman species, and in identifying this problem, this study examines representations of nonhuman species in natural history museums, where the categorical separation of human and nonhuman species is maintained through a static, hierarchical taxonomic narrative. This is demonstrated in a case study of the Ditsong National Museum of Natural History in Tshwane. Whilst much scientific research has shifted towards a recognition of emerging and entangled organisms in multispecies assemblages, this study argues that the didactic method of natural history museums and other forms of public biological science deny a nuanced and horizontal relationship with nonhuman species. Through creative practice, the argument is made that an alternative mode of experience and understanding can allow for more caring and empathetic relationships with nonhuman species. The Visitor Centre was devised as a mobile hub with which to engage the public through the close consideration of constructed art objects that sparked conversations about urban nonhuman species. Assemblage and relational aesthetics were employed as creative methods that, through the phenomenological and dialogical workings of The Visitor Centre, were used to unsettle the limitations of species-specific categories by human design. By means of anthropomorphism and storytelling, the artwork brought forth considerations of nonhuman species as subjects, facilitating the emotional and empathetic responses that followed. In this research, both the impact of the conversations of the participants and the artist-researcher's multiple roles as creator, witness, listener, interlocutor and audience are made evident and are acknowledged as key strategies in the formation of this alternative space of relationship making. 2022-01-31T08:58:10Z 2022-01-31T08:58:10Z 2021 2022-01-26T13:20:56Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35620 eng application/pdf Michaelis School of Fine Art Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Fine Art
Grobler, Nicola
The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment
title_full The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment
title_fullStr The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment
title_full_unstemmed The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment
title_short The visitor centre: artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment
title_sort visitor centre artistic reconfigurations of multispecies relationships in an urban environment
topic Fine Art
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35620
work_keys_str_mv AT groblernicola thevisitorcentreartisticreconfigurationsofmultispeciesrelationshipsinanurbanenvironment
AT groblernicola visitorcentreartisticreconfigurationsofmultispeciesrelationshipsinanurbanenvironment