#animal-motifs

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Arts
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

Sara Flores, the Peruvian Indigenous artist bringing Amazonian traditions into contemporary art

Kene patterns of the Shipibo-Conibo people reflect their worldview and will be showcased at the Venice Biennale by artist Sara Flores.
Graphic design
fromdesignyoutrust.com
1 week ago

This Artist Creates Dark Wood-Burned Illustrations Exploring Identity And The Human Psyche

Robb is an Italian artist known for his intricate pyrography, creating dark, psychological imagery that explores themes of identity and isolation.
Design
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
1 week ago

Biomimetic Architecture Reaches New Heights With This Bird-of-Paradise Yoga Space - Yanko Design

Thilina Liyanage's architecture translates animal gestures into functional designs, exemplified by the Rifle Bird Yogashala inspired by the Victoria's riflebird's courtship display.
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 week ago

The Monumental Impact of Indian Miniature Painting

Indian miniature painting showcases diverse styles and themes, reflecting the tastes of royal courts across the Indian subcontinent from 1630 to the early 19th century.
Renovation
fromRemodelista
2 weeks ago

Shame Studios New Roots Rug Collection Benefits Survivors of Domestic Abuse

Shame Studios creates rugs that support domestic abuse survivors through thoughtful design and charitable donations.
fromColossal
1 week ago

Anoushka Mirchandani Conjures Ancient Mythological Nature Spirits in Vibrant Oil Paintings

These water-women are beings of transformation, embodying sensuality, cosmic energy, and the transmission of matrilineal knowledge.
Arts
Roam Research
fromArs Technica
3 weeks ago

Study pinpoints when bow and arrow came to North America

North Americans adopted the bow and arrow about 1,400 years ago, replacing the atlatl and dart, with rapid adoption in the south and gradual replacement in the north.
Fashion & style
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Why wearing traditional dress will always be political

The wearing of traditional African clothing varies dramatically across the continent, from everyday staples in Sudan and Nigeria to rare ceremonial wear in Kenya and South Africa, influenced by colonial history and cultural diversity.
Fashion & style
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago

Wendy Red Star Gets Her Bag

Canal Street vendors sell counterfeit luxury goods at steep discounts, operating informally despite recent policy changes decriminalizing unlicensed vending.
Design
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
1 month ago

This Bio-mimicking Safari Deck Is Designed to Look Exactly Like a Rhino - Yanko Design

Thilina Liyanage designs a rhino-shaped wildlife observation deck that merges biomimetic architecture with functional safari infrastructure, creating a viewing platform whose form reflects the landscape and animals it observes.
Arts
from48 hills
3 weeks ago

For Iranian artist Shiva Ahmadi, 'ornamentation becomes a form of resistance' - 48 hills

Shiva Ahmadi's interdisciplinary art practice channels personal experiences of displacement, political upheaval, and immigrant anxiety into visually seductive works that address brutal global issues affecting marginalized communities.
Online Community Development
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 year ago

Powwows: Celebrating the culture and community of Indigenous people

The Dix Park Inter-Tribal Powwow brings together Indigenous communities from North Carolina's eight state and federally recognized tribes for cultural celebration, competition dancing, and traditional music.
US news
fromNewsday
1 month ago

Sleepy owl found resting among items on a New York antique store shelf

An eastern screech owl was discovered sleeping on a shelf in an antique store in upstate New York and was safely removed and released into the wild.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 month ago

The cost of casting animals as heroes and villains in conservation science

Hero-villain narratives in ecology oversimplify complex ecological stories and inappropriately impose human moral frameworks onto non-moral natural processes and species.
Science
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

Americans Are Uniquely Infatuated With Bald Eagles. Too Bad Most of Us Have No Idea What They're Actually Like.

Bald eagles are powerful raptors with massive beaks, locking talons, exceptional vision, frequent scavenging, and a call that sounds like a whistling giggle rather than a scream.
#contemporary-art
Environment
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Rewilding Rejects the We're-So-Special Exceptionalism

Rewilding requires rehabilitating human hearts, overcoming self-centeredness, and treating nature with compassion so ecosystems and nonhuman lives can flourish.
Yoga
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Yoga: The Essence of Animal Ethics, Kinship, and Rewilding

Yoga's ethical teachings can reorient human-animal relationships, fostering kinship and devotional practices that extend care to nonhuman beings and the environment.
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Mysterious symbols spanning the globe hint at a lost civilization

His investigation began after identifying recurring giant T-shapes, three-level indents, and step pyramids carved into ancient stones worldwide. 'These specific symbols that are built in different size proportions, and the symbols are found in ancient stones around the world, are not supposed to exist; no cultures are supposed to have any cross-platform,' LaCroix explained. The symbols appear in locations ranging from Turkey's Van region to South America and Cambodia.
History
US politics
fromFuturism
2 months ago

Man Trains Crows to Attack MAGA Hats

A man trained crows to remove and attack red MAGA hats by baiting them with food, demonstrating crow intelligence and creative anti-MAGA protest tactics.
fromItsnicethat
2 months ago

Weronika Marianna's flowing animations depict the natural world in constant motion

After quite impulsively tackling a frame-by-frame sequence of an animated figure merging into a mountainscape using paint on paper a few years ago, the artist started her journey into analogue animation and it's "a rabbit hole I never want to leave", she says. "This sense of continuous, boundaryless flow underpins both my life and my work. In animation, I have found the most compelling way to interpret the world being in constant motion."
Film
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Robin Wall Kimmerer, scientist and writer: Capitalism is not a natural phenomenon; it's a choice'

Kimmerer proposes kindness as an act of resistance. We need to equip ourselves with a new language, she explains, something that affirms that this is what it means to be human. In a world where kindness breeds distrust or is scorned, kindness, she affirms, is becoming a militant gesture. When you're kind to someone, it's not universally expected that they'll respond with kindness, but if that seed is planted, both people feel better,
Books
fromColossal
1 month ago

Rendered in Handmade Pigments, Rupy C. Tut's Warriors March Toward Belonging

The privilege of belonging and being seen as a part of a place, without needing explanations, is not available to my characters, who are finding ways to navigate and battle that out-of-place-ness. If the environment is meant to assuage, then the character's bodysuit is chaotic distress. Similarly, if the bodysuit is meant to pacify the narrative of the character's purpose, then the environment is lurking with dangers and chaotic, unsafe possibilities nearby.
Arts
San Francisco
fromKqed
2 months ago

Claude the Albino Alligator's Memorial Was as Iconic as He Was

Thousands gathered in San Francisco to celebrate Claude, the California Academy of Sciences' 30-year-old albino alligator, with a memorial, costume contest, music, and community tributes.
fromAeon
2 months ago

There's a gentle artistry to a museum taxidermist's craft | Aeon Videos

This short captures Tim Bovard, the staff taxidermist for the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, as he reflects on over five decades spent perfecting his craft. Sparked by a childhood fascination with the museum's dioramas that never faded, Bovard has devoted his career to shaping what he calls the 'illusion of life' - a process that requires both scientific precision and imaginative interpretation.
Philosophy
Fashion & style
fromApartment Therapy
1 month ago

10 Ways to Infuse Your Space with Afrohemian Design, According to Experts

Afrohemian decor combines African and bohemian styles through curated natural materials, handmade pieces, and heritage-rooted design rather than mass-produced items.
Environment
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 month ago

The truth behind wildlife tourism

Wildlife tourism in Kenya and Tanzania threatens migration corridors and Maasai land rights, requiring integrated approaches to reconcile conservation, community livelihoods and economic benefits.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

With The Rainbow Serpent, Dick Roughsey shared the spirit of our country. His work is a gift to us all | Alexis Wright

The Rainbow Serpent is an ancestral creation being that shapes landscape, law, ritual, and care for country central to Aboriginal spiritual belief.
fromAeon
2 months ago

Orcas haven't changed, but our view of the killer whale has | Aeon Essays

'Orcas are psychos,' quipped a close friend recently. He wasn't joking, nor was he ill-informed. In fact, he is probably the world's leading historian of whales and people. He had just watched a BBC Earth clip, narrated by David Attenborough, in which three killer whales separate a male humpback calf from his mother in the waters of Western Australia. The video's closing footage, with two of the orcas escorting the naive youngster to his imminent death, resembles nothing so much as a kidnapping:
Philosophy
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Let these nine romantic animals inspire you on Valentine's Day

Animal courtship displays—dances, duets, lifelong bonds—offer creative, nontraditional romantic ideas inspired by seahorses, gibbons, and monogamous dik-diks.
fromConde Nast Traveler
2 months ago

The Case for (Always) Traveling With Animal Print

I always pack at least one animal-printed item in my suitcase, whether it's a zebra handbag or a cheetah flat. I do this because it's stylish, but also because it's an effortless way to spruce up any outfit. Animal prints like leopard, snakeskin, and cow print might look busy on paper, but in practice, they behave like a neutral. These prints go with every color and fabric in my carry-on: black, white, red, denim, linen, you name it.
Fashion & style
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
1 month ago

When Zoo Design Tells the Story of Life Itself - Yanko Design

The House of Elements, set to become the crown jewel of Orientarium Zoo in Łódź, Poland, takes the classical elements (earth, ice, water, fire, and air) and transforms them into a 6,000-square-meter narrative experience. Rather than designing a building where you walk from exhibit to exhibit, VMA created a continuous downward-then-upward journey that mirrors the evolution of life itself. Designer: VMA Design Studio for Orientarium Zoo
Design
Environment
fromFortune
1 month ago

Happy Pangolin Day: the prize for the shy scaly creature as world's most trafficked mammal | Fortune

Pangolins are the world’s most trafficked mammals, hunted mainly for keratin scales and facing high extinction risk across all eight species.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 month ago

A musical ode to Indian wool and life on the Deccan Plateau | Aeon Videos

Traditional Deccani sheep wool sustains livelihoods and culture but faces decline as economic shifts, land-use change, and imported wool cause waste and threaten pastoral life.
Science
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

5 unlikely animal friendships that prove connection has no species barrier - Silicon Canals

Animals form deep, unexpected interspecies bonds that transcend instinct, demonstrating that genuine connection can override species boundaries and learned categories.
fromFast Company
1 month ago

These digital tools are stepping up the global fight against wildlife trafficking

In late 2025, Interpol coordinated a global operation across 134 nations, seizing roughly 30,000 live animals, confiscating illegal plant and timber products, and identifying about 1,100 suspected wildlife traffickers for national police to investigate. Wildlife trafficking is one of the most lucrative illicit industries worldwide. It nets between US$7 billion and $23 billion per year, according to the Global Environment Facility, a group of nearly 200 nations as well as businesses and nonprofits that fund environmental improvement and protection projects.
Environment
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 months ago

eila by MOFA studio realizes biomorphic art retreat in india through fluid architecture

Perched on a steep hillside overlooking Naggar valley in Himachal Pradesh, India, Eila is an art retreat that functions as an extension to the terrain rather than a static object. Designed by MOFA Studio, the project champions fluid architecture through advanced computational design, realizing a structure that mimics the landscape. The site's masterplan adopts a stepped strategy that preserves topsoil and rainwater runways, organizing the resort as a gradual, terraced descent.
Design
Fashion & style
fromAnOther
2 months ago

For Welsh Designer Paolo Carzana, Dragons Represent Community

Paolo Carzana's Autumn/Winter 2025 show, Dragons Unwinged at the Butchers Block, staged in purgatory exploring heaven, hell, and dragons as symbols of community and loss.
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Unique structure of elephant whiskers give them built-in sensing "intelligence"

An elephant's trunk is a marvelous thing, flexible enough to bend and stretch as it forages for food, but also stiff enough to grasp and maneuver even delicate objects like peanuts or a tortilla chip. That's because the trunk is highly sensitive when it comes to sensing touch. Scientists have determined that the whiskers lining the trunk are crucial for that sensitivity thanks to their unique structure, amounting to a kind of innate "material intelligence, according to a new paper published in the journal Science.
Science
#indigenous-art
fromColossal
2 months ago

'Cats' Is a Purr-fect Celebration of Felines in Art Throughout the Centuries

In 1835, a tortoiseshell cat measuring more than three feet long was enough to warrant a small advertisement in a British newspaper that as "the greatest curiosity ever shown to the public," it could be viewed at the Ship Tavern in London. Surely a pint of ale was the informal fee to view this extraordinary animal. It was during the 18th and 19th centuries in Europe that cats became increasingly recognized as worthy pets, beyond their role as mousers.
Arts
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 month ago

Arizona museum hosts world hoop dance championship

Last February, master of ceremonies Dennis Bowen (a Seneca elder) welcomed the reigning champion into the 2025 World Championship Hoop Dance Contest arena at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona. Thousands of spectators joined them to watch more than 100 dancers compete across the two-day event. Bowen announced Josiah Enriquez's (Pueblo of Pojoaque, Navajo, Isleta) accomplishments as a top place finisher several years running in the teen division and as the surprise winner in an unprecedented tiebreaking round in the adult division the year before.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Palestinian Embroidery Today

The ongoing repression of dissidents in Venezuela following the US attacks reminds us that President Trump never had the interest of the nation's people at heart. The painful reality of many immigrants is one of being caught between dehumanizing forces in their native countries and in exile, and reduced to abstractions in an increasingly unnuanced "discourse" that flattens lived experience.
Arts
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