Welcome to Planet Earth, Zach |
Diversionary topic this week, the first
of full-on university term, has been gorillas. Kamba’s new baby Zachary was born at
Brookfield Zoo, Illinois (video here), just in time to help us celebrate our firstborn’s birthday. 17 years
ago really did see one of the two best moments of my life, even if wildly enhanced
by an opium-based painkiller.
"Gorilla" by Henrik Gronvold in Natural History Museum |
I am a fan of gorilla dads. They are fiercely protective,
spend a great deal of time with their young, settle disputes between rival
siblings, and always make sure their females get enough to eat.
There is a greater dimorphism (disparity
between the size and weight) of male and female gorillas than in any other ape:
males are 1.5 times the size. This contrasts with only 1.1 on average in homo sapiens.
This means that human females have always preferred to select mates for reasons
other than being enormous, which is interesting in itself, although I’m not
sure what to make of the father of my own children being about 1.5 times my size.
Hanno and his Phoenician crew |
'Gorille (femelle) enlevant une négresse’ |
The 19th-century rediscovery
of the gorilla involved a vogue for artworks depicting gorillas abducting human
women. In 1859, the year Darwin published On
the Origin of Species, French artist
Emmanuel Frémiet outraged the jury of the Paris Salon. Inspired by the publicity surrounding the
first ever whole gorilla bodies (preserved in alcohol) to be seen in Paris, he
reconstructed a gorilla in 3-D action in ‘Gorille enlevant une négresse’.
'Gorilla abducting woman' mark 2 |
The work was destroyed, but the world
moved on. In 1887, Frémiet won the Medal of Honour for a new, life-size (male) Gorilla
carrying off a (Caucasian) woman. The critics couldn’t decide whether it supported or subverted Darwin’s theory, and worried about the tool-like rock
held by the gorilla: was he developing higher intelligence? But the public
loved it. Bronze casts and prints proliferated. It became a defining image in
French culture of the day. And I bet it lies somewhere behind the invention of
King Kong in the 1930s. I could always waste some time next week investigating
the links.
G Brassens Gare au gorille - YouTube
ReplyDeletewww.youtube.com/watch?v=qYWyQn50Mto
G Brassens Gare au gorille - YouTube
ReplyDeletewww.youtube.com/watch?v=qYWyQn50Mto
Gorilla revealing itself to be ... wait for it ... Marlene Dietrich! In 'Hot Voodoo' from Blonde Venus, (1932).
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