Bee Representations in Human Art and Culture through the Ages

IF 1.1 0 ART
K. Prendergast, Jair E. Garcia, Scarlett R. Howard, Zongxin Ren, Stuart J. McFarlane, A. Dyer
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

The field of bioaesthetics seeks to understand how modern humans may have first developed art appreciation and is informed by considering a broad range of fields including painting, sculpture, music and the built environment. In recent times there has been a diverse range of art and communication media representing bees, and such work is often linked to growing concerns about potential bee declines due to a variety of factors including natural habitat fragmentation, climate change, and pesticide use in agriculture. We take a broad view of human art representations of bees to ask if the current interest in artistic representations of bees is evidenced throughout history, and in different regions of the world prior to globalisation. We observe from the earliest records of human representations in cave art over 8,000 years old through to ancient Egyptian carvings of bees and hieroglyphics, that humans have had a long-term relationship with bees especially due to the benefits of honey, wax, and crop pollination. The relationship between humans and bees frequently links to religious and spiritual representations in different parts of the world from Australia to Europe, South America and Asia. Art mediums have frequently included the visual and musical, thus showing evidence of being deeply rooted in how different people around the world perceive and relate to bees in nature through creative practice. In modern times, artistic representations extend to installation arts, mixed-media, and the moving image. Through the examination of the diverse inclusion of bees in human culture and art, we show that there are links between the functional benefits of associating with bees, including sourcing sweet-tasting nutritious food that could have acted, we suggest, to condition positive responses in the brain, leading to the development of an aesthetic appreciation of work representing bees.
蜜蜂在人类艺术和文化中的表现
生物美学领域试图了解现代人类是如何首先发展出艺术欣赏的,并通过考虑绘画、雕塑、音乐和建筑环境等广泛领域来提供信息。近年来,有各种各样的艺术和传播媒体代表蜜蜂,这类工作往往与人们越来越担心由于自然栖息地破碎化、气候变化和农业中杀虫剂使用等多种因素可能导致蜜蜂数量减少有关。我们对人类对蜜蜂的艺术表现进行了广泛的观察,以询问目前对蜜蜂艺术表现的兴趣是否在整个历史上以及在全球化之前的世界不同地区都得到了证明。我们观察到,从8000多年前洞穴艺术中最早的人类表现记录,到古埃及的蜜蜂雕刻和象形文字,人类与蜜蜂有着长期的关系,尤其是由于蜂蜜、蜡和作物授粉的好处。从澳大利亚到欧洲、南美和亚洲,人类和蜜蜂之间的关系经常与世界不同地区的宗教和精神表现联系在一起。艺术媒介经常包括视觉和音乐,从而表明世界各地不同的人如何通过创造性的实践来感知和联系自然界中的蜜蜂。在现代,艺术表现延伸到装置艺术、混合媒体和运动图像。通过对蜜蜂在人类文化和艺术中的多样性的研究,我们表明,与蜜蜂交往的功能益处之间存在联系,包括寻找甜味的营养食物,我们认为,这些食物本可以在大脑中产生积极的反应,从而发展对代表蜜蜂的作品的审美欣赏。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
28.60%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: The main objective of Art & Perception is to provide a high-quality platform to publish new artwork and research in the multi-disciplinary emerging bridge between art and perception. As such it aims to become the top venue to explore the links between the science of perception and the arts, and to bring together artists, researchers, scholars and students in a unified community that can cooperate, discuss and develop new scientific perspectives in this complex and intriguing new field. The purpose is not to minimize or erase the differences between the arts and sciences, which are grounded in venerable histories that are in many ways necessarily distinct. Rather, the ambition of the journal is to combine the differing methods and insights of artists and scientists in order to expand our knowledge of art and perceptual experience in a way that neither could do alone. Art & Perception will serve those across several areas of science studying the way works of art and design affect us perceptually, cognitively, or physiologically. The editors are also keen to receive submissions from practicing artists, and those in related fields of history and theory, which offer an artistic perspective on perception.
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