(Re)wilding creative practices: Lessons from wildlife care

Dr Alinta Krauth (Universitetet i Bergen, Norway)
2023 Conference

What can artists/creative practitioners contribute to interspecies relations informed by notions of care and repair? This article reports on the interconnections between wildlife wilding/rewilding and creative practice in Australia, wherein wildlife rehabilitation contributed to a methodology for the creation of interactive art sculptures. I propose that a creative practitioner’s direct engagement in rewilding practices can lead to the design of human artistic expression that can be valuable to the lives and needs of other species. This research takes a mixed methods approach that involves both computational creative practice and enrichment design, where creative practice is diffracted through the lens of being a flying fox rehabilitator performing daily care duties in a care aviary/crèche. I include a discussion of flying fox­–human relations in Queensland, Australia, a discussion of rewilding as it relates to flying fox rehabilitation organisations, and discuss the creation of a series of interactive artworks called the Quantum Enrichment Entanglers (2021–2022) that can be seen as the original non-traditional outcomes of this research.

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About the author

Alinta Krauth

Alinta Krauth is a new media artist and researcher of digital practices from the ‘Outback’ of Australia. Much of her artistic research involves ecological themes and scientific fieldwork alongside ecology experts and wildlife rescue organisations. Her work considers how digital technologies can create rewarding sensory experiences for historically Othered audiences, most notably, her work with digital aesthetics for the enrichment of other species including dogs and flying foxes in rehabilitation. Her upcoming book The A(I)nimal Voice: More-thanhuman Artificial Intelligence in Art & Literature is currently under development.

Her recent artwork The (m)Otherhood of Meep, using machine learning AI to translate the vocalisations of flying foxes was nominated for the Ars Electronica S+T+ARTS Prize (2023) and was runner-up for the Robert Coover Award for Electronic Literature (2023). Her works have been exhibited and published globally, including in The SAGE Encyclopedia of The Internet, Electronic Book Review Journal, Social Alternatives Journal. Selected recent installations of her creative works have been seen in ZAZ10st Gallery Times Square NY, Science Gallery Detroit Detroit USA, The Glucksman Gallery Cork Ireland, HOTA Gold Coast Australia, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich Switzerland, Gallery 3.14 Bergen Norway, Art Laboratory Berlin Berlin Germany, The Powerhouse Sydney Australia.