Nesting and building nests
Poet Louise Gluck sums up the the complex simplicity of birds' nest building activities so well.
In her poem 'Nests", she writes:
I am discovering just how much that particular approach informs my practice overall - and for this body of work, particularly so. Part of what I want to do with NEST is to apply the methods of birds' natural nest-building habits to the work that I create - both literally and metaphorically. On a literal level, I have always works with recycled and reclaimed materials - the detritus of city living and the remaindered artifacts of the manufactured world. This is an essential aspect of what I do: to make work that treads lightly, but also speaks to those complexities of living in this world and out relationship to the materials we make and use to do that living. The parallels to the wiliness of birds as architects and engineers is obvious, and not a little fun:
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Bowerbird Nests ... the male creates installations of objects to attract the female, which may include bright blue bottle caps! |
I received a fabulous book this past Yule season, that is contributing enormously to my research for the NEST project, and to my understanding of some of the engineering and architectural challenges I am facing in constructing work.
Have a peek at Avian Architecture, by Peter Goodfellow - it's a goldmine of terrific research on - and images of - various forms of bird's nests, and has grab listing of resources for further research as well. (click on the "google preview" button on the page I've linked here to have a peek inside!)