Events
- Word and Image: Early Modern Treasures from the UCL Collections
- Centre for Early Modern Exchanges: Launch Conference
- Cultures of Surveillance - Conference
- Inspector Sangiorgi and the Sicilian mafia, 1875-1877
- Inaugural Lecture - Chronis Tzedakis
- Inaugural Lecture - Gesine Manuwald
- Inaugural Lecture - Imran Rasul
- Inaugural Lecture - Jennifer Robinson
- Inaugural Lecture - Frederic J. Schwartz
- Inaugural Lecture - Albert Weale
- Inaugural Lecture - Claire Warwick
- Inaugural Lecture - Ada Rapoport-Albert
- Inaugural Lecture - Helen Hackett
- Inaugural Lecture - Philippe Marlière
- Inaugural Lecture - Miriam Leonard
- Time-travels in literature and politics
- Displacing Persephone: Epic between Worlds
- Making Space
- Art by Animals comes to London
- Generation X Reflects: British – German Encounters
- Language, Identity and Multiculturalism Colloquium
Art by Animals comes to London
30 January 2012
UCL Grant Museum, 1 February to 9 March 2012

An exhibition featuring works of art from several species of animal, including paintings by elephants and apes, starts on 1 February at UCL’s Grant Museum of Zoology in collaboration with a graduate from the UCL Slade School of Fine Art.
A
highlight of the exhibition is a painting of a flowerpot by the elephant Boon
Me who was formerly a logging elephant in Thailand.
Art by
Animals features art by elephants, orang-utans, gorillas and chimps and
places
their handiwork alongside animal specimens and historical documentation.
Since the mid-50s zoos have used art and painting as a leisure activity for
animals, also using the activities to raise funds for conservation or the zoo
by selling the works.
Co-curator Mike Tuck, a graduate of the UCL Slade School of Fine Art said: “We
believe the exhibition at the Grant
Museum to be the first to
exhibit multiple species’ paintings and to attempt to take a broad view of the
phenomenon.”
While many species in captivity have interacted with paint, the exhibition aims
to ask visitors the question of whether animals can be creative and make art,
and why some animal creations are considered valuable and creative, while others
are dismissed as meaningless.
Jack Ashby, Manager of the Grant Museum of Zoology, said: “Whether this is actually art is the big question. While individual elephants are trained to always paint the same thing, art produced by apes is a lot more creative and is almost undistinguishable from abstract art by humans that use similar techniques.”
“Ape art is often compared to that of two or three year old children in the ‘scribble stage’,” he added.
Co-curator Will Tuck said: “Although it is fairly clear that any notion of art by animals is essentially anthropomorphic it starts to raise very interesting questions about the nature of human art.”
Images
of monkeys painting date back at least to the 17th century in European art and
possibly earlier but it wasn't until the 1950s that the actual animal paintings
became a serious subject.
This rise in popularity tied in with the emergence of
the Abstract Expressionist movement in art which started to look closely at the
act of mark making itself, and what it reveals about the artist’s subconscious.
Within this newly emerging context the art of animals, particularly primates
took on a radically different meaning.
Animal art was first popularised by Granada TV’s Zoo Time, which started in 1956.
The programme, which was presented
by zoologist and artist Desmond Morris, included chimps painting live. One
regular was the individual “Congo”,
who went on have his own exhibition at the Institute
of Contemporary Arts in London in the late 50s,
the catalogue for which is included in the UCL exhibition.
Salvador Dali was apparently so smitten with one of Congo’s canvases that he declared: “The hand of the chimpanzee is quasihuman; the hand of Jackson Pollock is totally animal!”
The exhibition features paintings gathered by co-curators Will and Mike Tuck from locations as varied as Samutprakarn Zoo, Thailand (elephants); Erie Zoo, Pennsylvania, USA (gorilla, orang-utan); Saint Louis Zoo, Missouri, USA (chimp); and Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, Colorado, USA (orang-utan). The exhibition also includes specifically commissioned work from Erie Zoo.
Talking about a one tiny chimpanzee painting, Digit Master, Mike Tuck said: “It was painted using his fingers and the marks are quite clear. To me it seems to be a very joyful work which suggests that the sensation of moving the paint was a pleasurable one. It is so close to the painting of a child.”
Art by Animals is part of the Humanimals Season at the UCL Grant Museum of
Zoology, and runs from 1 February to 9 March 2012.
Admission is free and there is no need to book.
