Monday, December 16, 2013

Birds of paradise update, plus how to turn hostility toward owls into art

Though I still haven't been shown the bird specimen collection at the American Museum of Natural History since the last post, I did in fact get to meet Errol Fuller, if only for a brief moment. About a month ago I played an "opening set", also at the Museum of Natural History, for a lecture by the author and artist Katrina van Grouw about her book The Unfeathered Bird, which is really cool and I'll probably write a post about it soon. This lecture happened to coincide with a lecture in the museum's other theater by David Attenborough, which was about Drawn from Paradise, a new book he co-wrote with Errol Fuller about the history of the birds of paradise in Western/European culture. Attenborough and Fuller were signing copies of this book after the lecture, so after I saw Katrina van Grouw's presentation I got in line to meet them. I didn't have their book yet, so I had them sign my sheet music.
Recently I got Drawn from Paradise, which is at least as awesome as The Lost Birds of Paradise which my last post was about. I haven't read all of it yet, but so far I haven't found any reference to the other book I wrote about last time, the one by Tim Laman and Ed Scholes (it's not in the index). However, I did notice a few observations about bird of paradise behavior that I thought may have been taken from Laman and Scholes' book. For example, the chapter about the 12-wired Bird of Paradise mentions that the male's special "wire" feathers are used to tickle the female's face, a fact I seem to remember reading that Laman and Scholes had discovered- I'll have to double check. *
One really cool thing I found in Drawn from Paradise relates to a painting, reproduced in the book, which is part of a series by the 17th-century Dutch artist Frans Snyders which depict a large group of birds of different species singing together, with an owl conducting them from a score. Attenborough and Fuller include this painting because there is a Greater Bird of Paradise in it, but their caption also mentions that the inspiration for these paintings may have been the observation of mixed flocks of songbirds converging around a roosting owl and scolding it. A taxidermied version of this behavior, which is known as mobbing, can be seen in the Japanese scene in the Museum of Natural History's hall of Birds of the World. I also wrote a tune that represents mobbing; it is the third movement of Bird Lives. The bass represents the owl.
More updates to come.
-Elijah

*This makes me think of the lonely male 12-wired Bird of Paradise that lived in the Bronx Zoo for much of my life- it needed someone to tickle so it was sent to another zoo in Germany that had a female.