A & S News
Baylor Student's Huge Painting of Elephant Calls Attention to Inhumane PoachersJune 8, 2010
The art -- 10 feet wide and 7 feet tall -- is garish. The fallen animal in the central panel has been decapitated; on each side panel is a life-sized likeness of a bloody, severed tusk.
Dutton, 23, a soft-spoken postbaccalaureate student at Baylor University, fell in love with elephants during a May 2008 visit to a Laos elephant sanctuary. Through her oil-on-canvas painting "The Harvest," she hopes to call attention to the increase in elephant poaching and the flourishing illegal ivory trade.
"The people who are doing this are not moral," she said. "They want every penny they can get. They kill the elephant and take its face off. Some hunters who use snare wire don't check for a month, and an animal will either bleed or starve. Elephants mourn; they bury their dead with tree branches.
"This is destruction. It's a gruesome harvest."
On the artwork's lower margin, Dutton painted three small white profiles of elephants, symbolic of carved ivory figurines.
"What's ironic is that the ivory is used to make things for tourists, who buy it as a little gift and say, 'Oh, I love elephants,'" she said.
As she created the painting, "I cried a lot," said Dutton, who is considering a medical or veterinary career. "I had to stop sometimes. It really got hard. I couldn't do too much, because I had to return to more innocent and happy images. But I felt it would be unjust and dishonest not to do this."
At Baylor University this fall, a multi-disciplinary learning group of students, led by faculty members in environmental science and music, will study animals and religion as well as animals and ethics and animals and culture, using multi-media outlets and taking part in social-service projects related to animals.
At Harvard University, a course on animals and religion is being taught this summer, with one of the instructors Dr. Paul Waldau, president of the Religion and Animals Institute and Barker Lecturer in Animal Law at Harvard Law School.
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