Saturday, August 05, 2006

The exhibit is up!



I spent three hours this morning hanging my photographs (not as easy as it looks) and I'm pretty pleased with the way the project turned out. If you can't make it to the Madison Public Library to see it, you can always look at the images in my online bird digiscoping gallery.



They said I could place an artist's statement with my exhibit (far right). Rather than blather on about the digiscoping technique, I thought I would pay tribute to the birds, so here's what I wrote:

The Natural Beauty of Wisconsin's Birds

Birds have captured our intrigue and imagination with their freedom of flight since the dawn of civilization - symbols of birds are featured in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs and Greek myths. Their sprightly behavior, elegant feathers and exquisite songs have inspired art and poetry across the ages.

With their innate and uncanny ability to use celestial navigational strategies, birds might be thought of as the first astronomers. They can detect the Earth's magnetism, sense the circumpolar movement of the stars and use the solar photoperiod (length of day) as cues that tell them when it's time to leave and how far they should fly.

Many of the birds pictured in this exhibit are migratory - they do not stay in Wisconsin during the winter and travel south to warmer climates where food can be found. They will fly hundreds or thousands of miles each year between their breeding and wintering grounds as a matter of survival. The Solitary Sandpiper (pictured in this exhibit) flies from near the Arctic Circle where it nests to as far south as Argentina and Uruguay.

The 1993 Monroe and Sibley checklist puts the number of bird species worldwide at 9,702 and over 300 can be observed right here in Wisconsin. Birds have ruled the skies for over 80 million years, but they base their homes closer to the ground on diverse habitats that include desert, prairie, forest, wetland, tropics, lakes and oceans and sometimes even your backyard.

Throughout the world many bird populations are in decline because there is less habitat for them to survive. According to a study by Standford University up to 10 percent of bird species are likely to become extinct by the year 2100. Their way of life often collides with ours as millions birds perish each year during migration. Great efforts in conservation are helping to tip the balance back in their favor, but there is still much work to be done.

All images © 2006 Mike McDowell

7 Comments:

At 9:32 PM, Blogger LauraHinNJ said...

Congrats to you - looks beautiful!

I like that you included a message to benefit the birds. As interesting as digiscoping technique may be to those into photography, I think the statement you presented is better suited to the general public that needs to learn why birds are important. Your photos certainly show how beautiful they are.

 
At 6:59 AM, Anonymous ldfbirder said...

Congratulations Mike, this is a wonderful achievement both for you and our avian friends. The subject of your narrative was well chosen and it was well stated.

 
At 8:39 AM, Blogger Gwyn said...

Mike, How long will your photos be displayed there? I have a storytelling gig in October in Monona, but travels will take me near Madison sooner than that.

It looks like an impressive body of work, and your statement is so well written. Congratulations!

 
At 8:47 AM, Blogger Mike McDowell said...

Hey Gwyn,

Thanks! They'll be up through August. It's only 18 photographs. They would have allowed more, but I ran out of time. Plus, when there are so many it becomes less like an exhibit and more like...wallpaper. :)

Mike M.

 
At 11:02 AM, Anonymous Ben from La Crosse said...

Nice exhibit, except for one sentence in the narrative:

They will fly hundreds or thousands of miles each year between their breeding and wintering grounds as a matter of survival.

I don't know that it's a matter of survival. Many birds die along the way. It's also not really a conscious decision that they make. I would say it's an evolutionary artifact that actually may threaten their survival, whereas a sedentary lifestyle in an isolated clime may serve them better.

 
At 12:05 PM, Blogger Mike McDowell said...

Hi Ben,

High mortality during migration is mentioned in a particular context in the narrative, but I certainly realize there are many other ways in which they perish. I stand by my remarks, as I never said that birds choose to migrate, only that they will in the sense that it is an expectation of their behavior. In no way was my use of the word "will" intended as birds making a conscious decision to migrate.

Migratory behavior, considered in the present environment and state of migratory birds, ensures survival at the species level. I realize it does not necessarily ensure the survival of an individual. If by some fantastical quirk of nature an entire population of arctic breeding insectivores failed to migrate, they would most certainly die.

The abundance of a food source that is replenished seasonally is a treasure-trove to be exploited by nature and certain species have adapted accordingly. Another theory on migration states that it began to evolve when individuals that moved from one area to another ultimately produced more young than those that remained in one area. The cost of migration is huge, but there are other considerations. Migration is a strategy for survival given a particular set of adaptations that match with circumstances. In the case of migratory birds, the payoff must be vastly greater than being sedentary.

Hypothetically, the problem isn’t so much that birds might be better served with a sedentary existence as much as we only need to straighten the Earth’s tilt and genetically engineer insects that can endure arctic winters for insectivorous birds. Then perhaps the tendency to migrate will disappear when it is no longer an advantage for them, and by that I mean survival advantage.

But going into a dissertation with my artist’s statement for a photography exhibit wasn’t exactly what I had in mind for the general public!

Cheers,

Mike M.

 
At 11:25 AM, Anonymous Liz the Librarian said...

Gorgeous photos on display, Mike. Thanks so much for bringing them to the library. Reminder to all your readers: Mike will be giving a talk/slide show on Backyard and Urban Birding at Madison Public Library-- Central Library (201 W. Mifflin St. Madison) at 7 p.m. on Wednesday August 9th (that's tomorrow!)

 

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