SIPGSI_141030_048
Existing comment:
Visitation
2004
color etching, aquatint, spit bite, and drypoint on paper

Walton Ford
born Larchmont, NY 1960

Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase through the Luisita L. and Franz H.
Denghausen Endowment, 2010.3

In Visitation, a large flock of passenger pigeons gorge themselves in a field strewn with fruit and nuts. Ford's scene recalls a written description by Audubon, "Whilst feeding, their avidity is at times so great that in attempting to swallow a large acorn or nut, they are seen gasping for a long while as if in the agonies of suffocation." The birds' ravenous feasting on the bounty of the land could symbolize the profligate exploitation of natural resources perpetrated by European settlers in the New World, which ultimately led to the extinction of the passenger pigeon. Ford also notes that the image alludes to the human tendency of blaming victims for their own destruction.
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