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Book Cover
Book
Author Gessert, George, 1944-

Title Green light : toward an art of evolution / George Gessert
Published Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, [2010]
©2010

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'BOOL  701.08 Ges/Glt  AVAILABLE
Description xxiii, 233 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Series Leonardo
Leonardo (Series) (Cambridge, Mass.)
Contents Divine plants and magical animals -- Aesthetic effects of domestication -- The rainforests of domestication -- The rise of ornamental plants -- Darwin's sublime -- Playing God -- Standards of excellence -- Doubles -- Kitsch plants -- Bastard flowers, genetic goofies, and Freud's bow wows -- Biotechnology in the garden -- Recent art involving DNA -- Naming life -- Anthropocentrism and genetic art -- The angel of extinction -- Seven breeding complexes -- The slowest art -- Breeding for wildness
Summary "Humans have bred plants and animals with an eye to aesthetics for centuries: flowers are selected for colorful blossoms or luxuriant foliage; racehorses are bred for the elegance of their frames. Hybridized plants were first exhibited as fine art in 1936, when the Museum of Modern Art in New York showed Edward Steichen's hybrid delphiniums. Since then, bio art has become a genre; artists work with a variety of living things, including plants, animals, bacteria, slime molds, and fungi. Many commentators have addressed the social and political concerns raised by making art out of living material. In Green Light,however, George Gessert examines the role that aesthetic perception has played in bio art and other interventions in evolution. Gessert looks at a variety of life forms that humans have helped shape, focusing on plants-the most widely domesticated form of life and the one that has been crucial to his own work as an artist. We learn about Ongadori chickens, bred to have tail feathers up to more than thirty feet long; pleasure gardens of the Aztecs, cultivated for intoxicating fragrance; Darwin's relationship to the arts; the rise and fall of eugenics; the aesthetic standards promoted by national plant societies; a daffodil that looks like a rose; and praise for weeds and wildflowers. Gessert surveys recent bio art and its accompanying philosophical problems, the "slow art" of plant breeding, and how to create new life that takes into account what we know about ecology, aesthetics, and ourselves." -- Publisher description
Analysis BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES/Botany
DIGITAL HUMANITIES & NEW MEDIA/New Media Art
PHILOSOPHY/Aesthetics
Notes Formerly CIP. Uk
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Gessert, George, 1944-
Art and biology.
Biotechnology in art.
Evolution (Biology) -- Philosophy.
Nature (Aesthetics)
LC no. 2009037617
ISBN 0262014149 (hardcover : alk. paper)
9780262014144 (hardcover : alk. paper)
Other Titles Toward an art of evolution