Can Animals Make Art?

Some philosophers believe that creating art requires intention and nonhuman animals, they’ll argue, simply don’t have the right kind of intentions for art-making

A male satin bowerbird stands before his creation.
A male satin bowerbird stands before his creation.
JJ Harrison, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
Share
A male satin bowerbird stands before his creation.
A male satin bowerbird stands before his creation.
JJ Harrison, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
Can Animals Make Art?
Copy

In the forests of eastern Australia, satin bowerbirds create structures known as “bowers.”

The males gather twigs and place them upright, in two bundles, with a gap in the middle, resulting in what looks like a miniature archway. All around the bower the bird scatters small objects – shells, pieces of plastic, flower petals – which all possess the same property: the color blue.

Studies suggest that the purpose of the bowers is to impress and attract females. But their beauty and intricacy has left some researchers wondering whether they shouldn’t be considered art.

Off the coasts of Japan, male white-spotted puffer fish create impressive nests to attract females. The male pufferfish uses his mouth to remove rocks from the sand and his body to wiggle out long, strategically placed grooves. The finished product is a multi-ringed sand mandala about 6 feet in diameter.

Like the bowers, the nests of the pufferfish are beautiful and involve mate attraction. Yet some researchers argue that since these sorts of works all look roughly the same – have the same shape, use the same materials and so on – they’re more likely the result of evolved, inflexible dispositions than more creative processes.

Of course, figuring out whether something is a work of art requires answering some tricky philosophical questions. Are animals even capable of creating art? And how can we tell whether something is a work of art rather than just a coincidentally beautiful object? As a philosopher and artist who’s interested in aesthetics and biology, I recently wrote about the evolution of behaviors in animals that could be seen as art.

Read more on The Conversation.

Fifty years after “Jaws” sparked global fear, scientists on Cape Cod are using cutting-edge tech—from shark-mounted cameras to real-time trackers—to understand great whites like never before
In southern Rhode Island, a ninth grader’s struggle with housing instability highlights how federal protections like McKinney-Vento help homeless students stay in school — even as those protections face an uncertain future
$500 fines draw sharp criticism from ACLU and at least one legislator
An unseasonable coastal storm is set to bring wind gusts over 40 mph and up to 2 inches of rain to Rhode Island and southern New England, as cold air and a strong jet stream fuel an unusual late-spring weather pattern
Stage combat choreographer Michael Liebhauser turns childhood fascination into a professional art form, blending safety, storytelling, and swashbuckling action on stages across Rhode Island
Transparency supporters urge lawmakers to update the Access to Public Records Act for the first time since 2012, calling for better access to crash data, 911 recordings, and other key documents