The Animal Anatomy Theatre opens the exhibition ‘Parrot Terristories’ on 10 October, focusing on the multifaceted history of grey parrots and humans
African grey parrots are social animals that live in the tropical rainforests of West and Central Africa, where they travel in large flocks. However, these clever birds are endangered in the wild. There are now probably more grey parrots living in human households in Europe, the USA and the Middle East than in the wild.
The research and exhibition project ‘Parrot Terristories’ focuses on the history and complex facets of the relationship between grey parrots and humans. For six years, Ute Hörner and Mathias Antlfinger, Professor of Multispecies Storytelling at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne, have been working with numerous actors and institutions to create images, texts, films, sound works and installations that examine and show where parrots and humans meet and what these encounters look like.
Art by grey parrots and humans
Hörner and Antlfinger themselves have lived in a household with grey parrots for 20 years and founded the interspecies collective CMUK – which stands for the first letters of the collective’s four first names – with Karl and Clara in 2014. There is a shared workbench in the studio where installations such as the ‘Dollhouse for Dinosaurs’ are created: A model of their shared home, on whose windows, doors and walls the birds have left their mark. Shredded magazines, cork crumbs and splinters of wood litter the floor and bear witness to the power of the beaks and the desire to mould and shape. An audio recording inside the model gives an idea of the strength and perseverance with which the animals went about their work. The exhibition also includes a joint work with Nick Byaba from the Parrot Tree Caretakers Association in Uganda, which examines the relationship between wild grey parrots and their environment.
The exhibits make this clear: Grey parrots are individuals with their own will and experience, they have agency and actively create and shape their world. Recognising this ‘animal agency’ is the central concern of ‘Parrot Terristories’.
The Tieranatomisches Theater is showing the exhibition in the context of research into material cultural heritage at the Helmholtz-Zentrum für Kulturtechnik and the Käte Hamburger Centre for Advanced Study in the Humanities ‘inherit.heritage in transformation’ at Humboldt University.
Caption: CMUK. Divided workbench in the studio. Photo: Hörner/Antlfinger
Supported by Kunststiftung NRW, Hauptstadtkulturfonds Berlin and Kunsthochschule für Medien Köln
Further information
Vernissage: 10 October, 7 pm
Location: Tieranatomisches Theater, Campus Nord, Philippstraße 13/Haus 3, 10115 Berlin
Exhibition duration: 11 October 2024 to 29 March 2025
Learn more about the exhibition at TA T
Further cooperation partners
Dr. Sylke Frahnert, Dr. Katja Kaiser, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (wissenschaftshistorische Beratung)
Christine Bluard, Annelore Naeckerts, Royal Museum for Central Africa, Tervuren, Belgien
Prof. Nancy Jacobs, Brown University
Dr. Vanessa Wijngaarden, University of Johannesburg, University of Liège
Contact:
Felix Sattler, Director and Curator of the TA T
felix.sattler@culture.hu-berlin.de