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2 Rel.: Beyond Anthropocentrism 27 (2014)
Alpha: The Figure in the Cage

handle is hein.journals/relations2 and id is 159 raw text is: 




Alpha: the Figure in the Cage



Juliet  MacDonald

Research Assistant in the School ofArt, Design and Architecture,
University ofHuddersfield

doi: 10.7358/rela-2014-002-macd                        J.Macdonald@hud.ac.uk



ABSTRACT

Drawing is sometimes referred to as a definitively human activity. In this article drawings
by nonhuman  animals, particularly primates, are discussed as evidence that the activity is
not essentially or exclusively human. In particular the research focuses on one chimpanzee,
Alpha, whose drawings were the subject of an experiment in Gestalt psychology published in
1951. The article traces her early life as the first chimpanzee to be born as part of a breeding
program established by Robert Yerkes, whose scientific project has been critically examined
by Donna  Haraway  (1989, 1991). Alpha was cared for in the home of two scientists in
infancy but later moved to an enclosure with other chimpanzees. Alpha's desire to draw is
shown  to have developed in the context of both human contact and physical captivity. Sub-
sequent citations of the drawing experiment with Alpha are discussed as evidence that draw-
ings by nonhuman primates have provoked academic interest, although commentators are
cautious in attributing significance to them. The continuing potential of Alpha's drawings to
generate discussion and challenge anthropocentric assumptions is suggested as the disruptive
legacy of this particular laboratory animal within the process of knowledge production.

Keywords:  Drawing,  chimpanzee,  psychology, gesture, Yerkes, Haraway,  labora-
tory, animal, painting, primate.



1.   INTRODUCTION

     For at least the past 10  years her behaviour  with  pencil and  paper has
     been essentially as at present. During this time she has never been directly
     rewarded  for drawing,  and  it is quite evident that the activity does not
     involve social rewards. If possible she retires with her paper to a far side of
     the cage (in pre-experimental period), turns her back to the observer, works
     for a time with complete preoccupation, and eventually tears up the paper. If
     caged with another animal that watches her drawing, she shoulders the other
     aside or turns away to work in a corner. The motivation is intense. She will
     disregard food when  she sees someone  with  pencil and paper and  will beg
     for these. (Schiller 1951, 110-1)

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