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Gallery Hours

Robert L. Ringel Gallery,
Purdue Memorial Union

Stewart Center Gallery,
Stewart Center

Monday — Saturday,
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.;
Thursday
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.;
Sunday
1 to 5 p.m.

For more information, call (765) 496-7899 or contact us at galleries@purdue.edu

April 1 through May 10, 2009 
Tippecanoe Arts Federation

A community-wide celebration of the (un)natural history of Tippecanoe County presented at the

Tippecanoe Arts Federation

Click here for images from the exhibit!

Residents of all 14 counties in the Indiana Region 4 Arts Partnership were invited to submit entries of visual, performing, musical, and literary art that addressed the invented natural history of the Tippecanoe County region, through imaginative interpretation and fantastic fabrication.

The project was meant to be whimsical and imaginative, teasing visitors with mythical beasts, imagined histories and fake statistics. It also emphasize the contributions and new creative works of artists, writers and performers in this area.

For instance...
The exhibit featured (but certainly was not be limited to) these 3 examples of imagined and now “extinct” natural fauna:

the Wabash River Dolphin - trapped here when the glacial melt and inland waters receded, the Wabash River Dolphin was referred to as the river buffalo and its hide provided area Native Americans with waterproof mocassins and raingear...

the Wea Plains Pygmy Bison - long-rumored and eventually unearthed in the early twentieth century, great herds of the Wea Plains Pygmy Bison once thundered... well, let's say "trundled"... across the local landscape in vast numbers before being trapped in an apparent mud flow. Once thought to be lawn sculptures, many of their fossilized remains decayed on front porches throughout the region and are now lost...

and Tippecanus Rex - an evolutionary hybrid, this regional dinosaur appears to have been similar in shape to its much larger cousin, the Tyrannosaurus Rex, but had the unique feature of grass which grew upon its back. Unfortunately, this made the hapless Tippecanus Rex prey to both carnivores and herbivores - causing it to be literally grazed to death...

 

Image from Purdue Galleries Exhibition

 

"Tippecanus Rex" and "Urban Legends" are a joint project supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts

 
 
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