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Christy Rupp Creates Creepy Skeletons of Extinct Birds With Fast Food Chicken Bones

10/21/2011
by
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  • Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"
    At first glance, <a href="http://www.christyrupp.com/" target="_blank">Christy Rupp</a>’s bone sculptures appear to be archeological artifacts from the <a href="http://www.amnh.org/" target="_blank">American Museum of Natural History</a>. But the various bird skeletons are in fact completely fabricated by Rupp entirely from chicken bones! In a series called “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans”, the artist recycles discarded bones from<a href="http://inhabitat.com/10-ridiculous-pinkwashed-products/" target="_blank"> fast food restaurants</a> to recreate species that have been extinct for centuries.
    1
  • Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"
    Rupp’s <a href="http://inhabitat.com/creepy-camera-made-from-150-year-old-human-skull/" target="_blank">creepy creature</a>s represent the long gone Dodo, tiny Carolina parakeets, long legged Moas, Icelandic Great Auks and Ivory Billed Woodpeckers.
    2
  • Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"
    She carefull collects the discarded chicken bones from fast food refuse bins, their meat mostly consumed, with remnants of deep fried batter, and sticky sauces still lingering, before she boils them at her home studio. Each bird is paired with their <a href="http://inhabitat.com/interactive-almost-extinct-calendar-raises-awareness-of-endangered-species/" target="_blank">approximate extinction date</a>, or last known sighting of the species.
    3
  • Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"
    Rupp’s sculptures point a sharp finger toward both the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/is-climate-change-making-our-food-more-dangerous/" target="_blank">fast food industry</a>, and environmental effects on nature and wildlife. The fast food industry has turned raising poultry into a mass market business, with each bird raised as cheaply as possible in crowded, unhealthy conditions.
    4
  • Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"
    Rupp is unapologetic, raising attention toward the hormonally- pumped birds we consume, who are also <a href="http://inhabitat.com/surprise-another-report-shows-that-eating-meat-contributes-to-global-warming/" target="_blank">rife with antibiotics and pesticides</a>, which we also consume with our ten piece chicken meals.
    5
  • Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"
    Her creative plan of attack fuses a man versus nature problem of generations past, with many of the extinct birds she chose to represent having been last seen in the 1800s to early 1900s, with a modern problem of processed and <a href="http://inhabitat.com/organic-farmers-sueing-monsanto-over-contaminated-crops/" target="_blank">genetically modified food</a>.
    6
  • Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"
    The morbid skeletons are not just creative and smart- they are a <a href="http://inhabitat.com/wim-delvoyes-creepy-stained-glass-windows-are-made-from-recycled-x-rays/" target="_blank">perfectly gruesome display fitting for Halloween</a>!
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Christy Rupp “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans"

At first glance, Christy Rupp’s bone sculptures appear to be archeological artifacts from the American Museum of Natural History. But the various bird skeletons are in fact completely fabricated by Rupp entirely from chicken bones! In a series called “Extinct Birds Previously Consumed By Humans”, the artist recycles discarded bones from fast food restaurants to recreate species that have been extinct for centuries.

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Categories:  Art, Design, Innovations
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