"The fear of you and the dread of you shall be 
upon every beast of the earth and upon every bird of the heavens, upon 
everything that creeps on the ground and all the fish of the sea. Into 
your hand they are delivered. Every moving thing that lives shall be 
food for you. And as I gave you the green plants, I give you everything."
Genesis 9:2-3 
Sunday, December 26, 2021
Christmas, Nature, and the Art of Slaughter
There is no doubt that 
Christmas is a time when we become aware of the precariousness of nature
 as the sun's light fades, leaves fall off the trees and the weather 
gets colder. The sun seems to stop moving (solstice) for three days, and
 then as if by magic starts moving again in the other direction and 
seems to be reborn. This phenomenon was noticed thousands of years 
before Christian celebrations of the birth of Jesus. At some point, 
elements of Saturnalia, Midwinter, Yule and other pagan traditions 
became merged into the general Christmas traditions that are observed 
today. It is a festival that celebrates life in all its forms. Christmas
 cards glorify nature in their depictions of many types of snowy 
woodland scenes and animals: robins, reindeer, donkeys, sheep, oxen 
(bullocks), doves, etc. In every culture today there are still elements 
of nature-worship: in the maintenance of old traditions like
the goddess
 
Pachamama
(revered by the indigenous peoples of the Ande) or various forms of neo-paganism that hark back to pre-Christian times. 
Çatalhöyük Wall Paintings, Çatalhöyük, Bull hunting scene. Copies of painting on plaster. 6 th millennium BC.
Modern secular paganism
 
places "great emphasis on the divinity of nature" while the animistic 
aspects of Pagan theology asserts "that all things have a soul - not 
just humans or organic life - so this bond is held with mountains and 
rivers as well as trees and wild animals." For example:"Secular
 Paganism is a set of principles shared by diverse groups around the 
world. It is a natural outgrowth of many peoples’ personal ethics and 
beliefs about life. It is not a religion but rather an ethical view 
based on the belief that nature is sacred and must be respected and 
treasured. Secular Pagans believe that we are a part of nature, not her 
master."
Illustration of medieval pig stunning, from The Medieval Cookbook
However, our relationship with nature is contradictory and we 
treat the different parts of nature in very different ways. This can be 
seen in the way we treat some animals as pets, others as a danger, and 
most as a source of food that is produced on a massive industrial scale 
with slaughterhouses, factories, and many forms of processing. This is 
reflected in art down through the ages, some of which glorifies hunting 
and killing animals, and some which tries to show the terror animals are
 put through before coming to a grisly end. In her book Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows: An Introduction to Carnism,
 Melanie Joy tries to make sense of this and theorizes a distinction 
between carnivores and carnists: "Carnivores require meat in their diet 
for survival, but carnists choose to eat meat based on their beliefs." Thus:
Psychic numbing describes the way we withdraw from overwhelming issues 
like the contradiction between our love of animals and the way we treat 
them. It can be the way we deal with many big problems such as "impending doom, chaos, and ultimately mankind's extinction."
The Butcher and his Servant (1568), drawn and engraved by Jost Amman
We withdraw because we know that dealing with one serious issue 
tends to open up many other interlinked issues, while, at the same 
time getting progressively bigger as well as stretching backwards and 
forwards in time. 
Claudia von Werlhof grasps these widening problems and deals with them 
head on. She believes that the essential problem is rooted in an 
ideology which has as its basis a hatred for life itself. She blames the
 centuries-old socio-political systems of 
patriarchy 
and capitalism that are "characterized by exploitation, extraction and 
appropriation." She notes:
"The sinister motive of hating life needs to be hidden. The 
unspeakable crimes that all patriarchies have committed against life 
itself, against children, women, and all human beings, against the 
Earth, animals, and plants must not be revealed. The hatred of life is 
the reason and the rational justification for the violence against it; a
 violence that intends to prevent any rebellion or uprising of those not
 believing in the system it protects; a system that many would see as a 
grave assault on their dignity if they only recognized it."
Furthermore she makes a distinction between killing and death:
"It
 has been repeatedly suggested that the patriarchal system is a system 
of death. That is not entirely correct. The patriarchal system is a 
system of killing, that is of artificial death: ecocide, matricide, 
homicide in general and finally “omnicide,” the killing of everything. 
[...] We are up against a totalitarian system that does not care for its
 subjects, that cannot (or no longer) be stopped, and that is constantly
 becoming faster and more efficient in its attempt to end life on this 
planet – while turning even this very process into a tool for further 
accumulation of profit and power."
Man's best friend, animals' worst enemy
Over
 the centuries the system of killing has become more and more 
sophisticated. In art, depictions of hunting show changes from trapping 
to chasing with dogs to shooting with guns. In many paintings dogs are 
the 'collaborationists' who turn on their fellow animals for the benefit
 of their masters.
A 14th-century depiction of boar hunting with hounds from Tacuina sanitatis (XIV century)
Jean-Baptiste Oudry, Hunting At The Saint-jean Pond In The Forest Of Compiegne, Before 1734  
 In one extraordinary set of paintings by the artist 
Paulus Potter (1625–1654),
Punishment of a Hunter, we see different forms of entrapment and 
killing depicted around two central paintings, one of which shows the 
hunter going on trial before a court of animals, while the other shows 
some animals dancing for joy as the 'treacherous' dogs are hung and the 
dead hunter is roasted in a roaring fire. 
Punishment of a Hunter, painting with 14 frames by Paulus Potter, 1 of which is by Cornelis van Poelenburgh (ca.1650)
Frans Snyders (1579-1657) (studio of) - The Fowl Market 
Changing
 attitudes towards hunting and selling of animal carcasses has been 
growing in recent decades and can be seen similarly in the artistic 
depiction of such practices as Maxwell Williams notes: "Upset
 students at Cambridge University successfully petitioned to have a 
painting depicting a butcher removed from their dining hall. The 
painting, The Fowl Market by the studio of early-17th-century 
Dutch painter Frans Snyders, loomed large above those in the dining room
 at Hughes Hall, a postgraduate school within Cambridge. The painting 
depicts the butcher at his labors, surrounded by a veritable mountain of
 dead animals. Nearby, a living dog appears to be barking."
Hunting the seas 
Negative attitudes towards hunting on land also extend to 
whale hunting and fishing as the seas are depleted of life and thus 
potentially creating a catastrophic collapse of the marine ecological 
cycle. Factory ships, fish farming and whaling have come in for much 
criticism, while quotas for certain species of fish have been imposed by
 governments due to overfishing.  In the examples shown here we see 
whale hunting being depicted as heroic as the hunters deal with huge 
whales and fierce weather, then an ambivalent merchant, to a later 
painting of a cruel, knife-wielding monger.
Robert Walter Weir Jr, Taking a Whale / Shooting a Whale with a Shoulder Gun (ca. 1855-1866)
 Gyula Derkovits (1894-1934) - Fish seller (1930)
Slaughterhouse industry
The
 greatest criticism in recent decades has been reserved for the 
practices carried out in slaughterhouses using what were declared to be 
'humane' ways of killing animals. Time and time again shocking, 
secretly filmed footage has emerged of extreme cruelty towards sentient 
beings uttering horrific shrieks as they are chased and battered to 
death. In recent depictions shown here artists use Expressionist techniques
 to try and depict the horror of the slaughterhouse bloodletting. 
Lovis Corinth (1858–1925), Im Schlachthaus (1893)
Nicolai Fechin (1881–1955) - The Slaughterhouse (1919)
Sue
 Coe (born 1951) is an English artist and illustrator who goes one step 
further by using her works to benefit animal rights organizations as 
well as illustrating books and essays to explore issues such as factory 
farming and meat packing. 
Sue Coe
- My mother and I watch a pig escape the slaughterhouse
The
 struggle against all these different old and modern practices of 
industrializing and converting our fellow beings into various types of 
products seems to be finally taking hold of the popular imagination.  In
 a recent article
in the UK
 Andrew Anthony wrote that:
"Meat consumption in this country has declined by 17% over the past decade. The Economist
 magazine named 2019 “The Year of the Vegan”. And last year the World 
Health Organization recommended a plant-based diet for a healthy life. 
That endorsement, along with growing concerns about the impact of dairy 
farming on the environment, combined with the lifestyle rethink enabled 
by the lockdown, has significantly increased the number of people 
turning their backs on animal products in the UK."
The Vegan Society commissioned research
 that found that: "At least 542,000 people in Britain are now following a
 vegan diet and never consume any animal products including meat, fish, 
milk, cheese, eggs and honey. This is a whopping increase since the last
 estimate of 150,000 ten years ago, making veganism one of Britain’s 
fastest growing lifestyle movements." Furthermore, Jasmijn de Boo, CEO 
of The Vegan Society commented
 that "more people than ever before are acting upon the health and 
environmental benefits of veganism, and finding out what really goes on 
in the meat and dairy industries and deciding they do not want to 
contribute to the pain and suffering of animals.” Maybe we are seeing 
the seeds of a new enlightened attitude towards animals which will also 
be reflected in a more positive art in the future.
Caoimhghin Ó Croidheáin is an Irish artist, lecturer and writer. His artwork
 consists of paintings based on contemporary geopolitical themes as well
 as Irish history and cityscapes of Dublin. His blog of critical writing
 based on cinema, art and politics along with research on a database of 
Realist and Social Realist art from around the world can be viewed 
country by country here.

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