*2010*

overlap occurs

 

Rats in Eastern cultures:

In Imperial Chinese culture, the rat is the first of the twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac. People born in this year are expected to possess qualities associated with rats, including creativity, honesty, generosity, ambition, a quick temper and wastefulness.
The indigenous rats are allowed to run freely throughout the Karni Mata temple.
In Indian tradition a rat's statue is always found in a temple of Ganesh. In the northwestern Indian city of Deshnoke, the rats at the Karni Mata Temple are held to be destined for reincarnation as Sadhus (Hindu holy men). The attending priests feed milk and grain to the rats, of which the pilgrims also partake. Eating food that has been touched by rats is considered a blessing from god.

 

Rats in Western cultures:

Western associations with the rat are generally negative. For instance, "Rats!" is used as a substitute for various vulgar interjections in the English language. These associations do not draw, per se, from any biological or behavioral trait of the rat, but possibly from the association of rats with the 14th-century medieval plague called the Black Death. Rats are seen as vicious, unclean, parasitic animals that steal food and spread disease.
Rats are frequently blamed for damaging food supplies and other goods, or spreading disease. Their reputation has carried into common parlance: in the English language, rat is often an insult. It is a term (noun and verb) in criminal slang for an informant - "to rat on someone" is to betray them by informing the authorities of a crime or misdeed they committed. Describing a person as "rat-like" usually implies he or she is unattractive and suspicious.
Depictions of rats in fiction are historically inaccurate and negative. Rats are often cast in vicious and aggressive roles when in fact it is their shyness which helps keep them undiscovered for so long in an infested home.
source:- /wikipedia.org
Håkon Danielsen
Håkon Danielsen
Håkon Danielsen

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a quick video documentation of the installation. - 1.07 min - no sound

 

Håkon Danielsen

a rat in a pool of black oil, is wired and connected to the screen, while two stop motion sequences is constantly looping

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48 sec. loop - stop motion - no sound

 

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50 sec. loop - stop motion - no sound