It may not be obvious in my photographs but Joo's zebra has a highly reflective surface which is meant to absorb the external environment of the sculpture and he says he would love to exhibit it in a forest. Stubb's 1763 portrait was so detailed that zoologists from a later century could identity it as a Cape Mountain Zebra, the smallest of the species.
The mountain zebra was the choice of another artist so it must have been why Jonathan Kingdon's "Hartmann's Mountain Zebra" was placed nearby. There is a bit of a scientific dispute as to whether the Cape and Hartmann are two similar distinct species or the same one. The person to ask would definitely be Jonathan Kingdon for not only is he an artist and sculptor but also a zoologist and science author. It was while putting together his 'An Atlas of Evolution in Africa' that he asked himself the question - what are zebra stripes for? He continues "After months and years of observation in many parts of East Africa and quantitative experiments with painted stripe panels I concluded that stripes, for zebras, had become a sort of bonding device... served to make any zebra attractive. An important quality in the progressive socialisation of a famous curmudgeonly mammal"
I like the sweeping mane on the sculpture and whatever the zebra stripes are for they are always mesmerising so here is the real thing - Hartmann's Mountain Zebra.
By Yathin S Krishnappa - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link
An entry to ABC Wednesday, a journey through the alphabet, this week sojourning at Z here
3 comments:
Wonderful art but I do prefer the original kind ;-)
Happy NEW YEAR
Have a splendid, ♥=warming ABC-Wednes-day / -week
♫ M e l ☺ d y (ab-w-team)
http://melodymusic.nl/21-zy
Beautiful photos of the zebras for Z post ~
Happy Week to You,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
Me too Roger but in mitigation these are my first inanimate ones:)
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