|  
 Introduction 
 Mediated Nature 
 Sponsor Trap 
 Generation of Extinction 
 Archival Environment 
 Credits 
 About the Artists 
Phagamys orthodonMus musculus muralis
 Hypnomys morpheus
 Hypnomys mahonensis
 Thyrrhenicola hanceni
 Pitymys bavaricus
 Mammothus primigenius
 Equus hemionus anatoliensis
 Equus ferus silverstris
 Prolagus sardus
 Prolagus corcianus
 Nesiotites similis
 Nesiotites corsicanus
 Panthera tigris virgaes
 Panthera pardus tulliana
 Panthera leo europaea
 Felis lynx sardiniae
 Sinotherium sardus
 Canis lupus minor
 Canis lupus deiesnus
 Hippopoesmus sp.nov
 Mecodema punctellum
 Candibrervus ropalophorus
 Candibrervus rethymnensis
 Myotragus balearicus
 Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica
 Capra pyrenaica lusiesnica
 Anthicus antiochensis
 Aplothorax bunrchelli
 Atelothrus transiens
 Blackburnia insignis
 Chaetotrechiana kiuchii
 Disenochus micantipennis
 Ishikawatrechus intermedius
 Rangifer esrandus
 
 |     The Archival Environment 
A media archive now spans the globe, and virtual reality adds spectacular depth to cyberspace. 
What ramifications do these developments have on the world outside of electronic circuitry?  
While humans amass information, non-sustainable use of natural resources continues.  
 
Despite the present enthusiasm for storing genetic materials and deciphering genetic codes,
saving information is not the same as saving species.  Saving species requires environmental conservation.  A 
growing data bank of genetic base codes is a poor consolation for the loss of habitats and species.  Yet Western science 
seems resigned to the disappearance of the Natural -- even furthering the process with myriad feats of genetic re-engineering.   
This suspicious exchange is masked by turns as necessity and progress.
 
These postures of resignation and indifference can be traced across a range of cultural practices.  The need for 
concrete action is often displaced to the realm of bits and codes.  Technological avoidance rituals involving data 
processing, exchange, production and archiving substitute fiber-optic titillation for conservation.  But the rising
tide of extinction has begun to demonstrate emphatically that the ecological crisis is real.   
Endangered species cannot seek refuge in castles in the air.  Presumptions of progress must 
be grounded or abandoned.  
Perhaps it is quixotic to suppose that art could interfere with the rising curves of 
species extinction and human population growth.  Let the experts decide.  
In the meantime, NOVUS.EXTINCTUS takes aim at the conventional wisdom that leads us
along the information super-highway to a digital wonderland.
   | 
You may throw nature out the door,but it will come back through the window.
 -- Proverb recounted by Dostoevsky
 | 
     
  [ Next ] |