Intelligent Design: Interspecies Art is a group exhibition of twenty international artists exploring human interaction and collaboration with non-human animals through a collection of provocative video installations, photographs, paintings, and sculptures.
Catherine Chalmers
Beatriz da Costa
John Divola
Sean Dockray
Sam Easterson
Carlee Fernandez
Jill Greenberg
Fritz Haeg
Kathy High
Desirée Holman
Natalie Jeremijenko
Lisa Jevbratt
Nina Katchadourian
Hilja Keading
Rachel Mayeri
M.A. Peers
Nicolas Primat with Patrick Munck
Alison Ruttan
Corinna Schnitt
Jim Trainor
Organized by UCR Sweeney Art Gallery, and curated by gallery director, Tyler Stallings, and artist/independent curator, Rachel Mayeri.
For the online catalog and related events, see:
http://www.sweeney.ucr.edu/exhibitions/intelligentdesign
Artists in the exhibition collaborate with cockroaches, pigeons, dogs, cats, ants, bears, baboons, rats, spiders, trout, and other species, which may be domesticated, imaginary, laboratory, modeled, or wild. Curious about the animal’s point of view, artists design their projects as a form of conversation or inquiry about the nonhuman world. Their artwork challenges the anthropocentric perspective of the world, placing human perception on par with other animals. Inspired by Darwin, the environmental movement, and species collapse, Intelligent Design envisions a paradigm shift in which human beings are no longer the center of the Universe.
The exhibition will also stimulate discussions about the differences and similarities of how the arts and sciences approach the world, animals as products, animal rights, conservation, and speciesism, as a form of prejudice against animals. Intelligent Design will be the first exhibition in the U.S. to explore interspecies art, coming on the heels of several exhibitions and conferences in the UK this year that explored the topic in light of this year’s 200-year celebration of Charles Darwin’s birth.
The reception on Saturday, September 26, 6-9 PM is concurrent with the receptions for the new exhibitions at Sweeney’s sister institution next door, UCR/California Museum of Photography, http://cmp.ucr.edu.
Intelligent Design: Interspecies Art is a group exhibition of twenty international artists exploring human interaction and collaboration with non-human animals through a collection of provocative video installations, photographs, paintings, and sculptures.
Catherine Chalmers
Beatriz da Costa
John Divola
Sean Dockray
Sam Easterson
Carlee Fernandez
Jill Greenberg
Fritz Haeg
Kathy High
Desirée Holman
Natalie Jeremijenko
Lisa Jevbratt
Nina Katchadourian
Hilja Keading
Rachel Mayeri
M.A. Peers
Nicolas Primat with Patrick Munck
Alison Ruttan
Corinna Schnitt
Jim Trainor
Organized by UCR Sweeney Art Gallery, and curated by gallery director, Tyler Stallings, and artist/independent curator, Rachel Mayeri.
For the online catalog and related events, see:
http://www.sweeney.ucr.edu/exhibitions/intelligentdesign
Artists in the exhibition collaborate with cockroaches, pigeons, dogs, cats, ants, bears, baboons, rats, spiders, trout, and other species, which may be domesticated, imaginary, laboratory, modeled, or wild. Curious about the animal’s point of view, artists design their projects as a form of conversation or inquiry about the nonhuman world. Their artwork challenges the anthropocentric perspective of the world, placing human perception on par with other animals. Inspired by Darwin, the environmental movement, and species collapse, Intelligent Design envisions a paradigm shift in which human beings are no longer the center of the Universe.
The exhibition will also stimulate discussions about the differences and similarities of how the arts and sciences approach the world, animals as products, animal rights, conservation, and speciesism, as a form of prejudice against animals. Intelligent Design will be the first exhibition in the U.S. to explore interspecies art, coming on the heels of several exhibitions and conferences in the UK this year that explored the topic in light of this year’s 200-year celebration of Charles Darwin’s birth.
The reception on Saturday, September 26, 6-9 PM is concurrent with the receptions for the new exhibitions at Sweeney’s sister institution next door, UCR/California Museum of Photography, http://cmp.ucr.edu.



































