Exhibitions

Queer Perspectives on Nature: Photo Exhibition at the Natural History Museum

Add to bookmarks
Share
The exhibition “Queer Nature Photography Awards” at the South Tyrol Museum of Natural History showcases, until the end of June, the diversity of nature through award-winning photographs and challenges conventional notions of gender and normality. It connects biodiversity with social diversity and will later also be displayed at the South Tyrol Planetarium.



“What we consider ‘natural’ is often more varied than we think,” summarizes David Gruber, director of the South Tyrol Museum of Natural History, reflecting the idea behind the new exhibition. The display, which intertwines biodiversity and social diversity, will be open from Wednesday, March 25 to June 30 on the first and second floors of the Museum of Natural History, and will then move from July 1 to August 31 to the South Tyrol Planetarium in San Valentino in Campo.



The internationally curated exhibition brings together ten award-winning photographs by eight artists from around the world. The works illustrate how diverse behaviors, reproductive strategies, and social relationships can be in the animal kingdom: from long-term pair bonds among dolphins to homosexual interactions among mammals, to flexible gender roles among invertebrates.



In this way, the exhibition highlights that diversity is not an exceptional occurrence, but a fundamental principle of nature. At the same time, it raises questions that are also socially relevant: How do norms arise? What is meant by ‘natural’? And how do we deal with diversity?



“The exhibition aims to contribute to an open and inclusive society. It demonstrates that nature does not adhere to rigid categories and invites us to perceive diversity as an enrichment, both ecologically and socially,” says Gruber.



The awards are promoted by the non-profit organization Narwhal Rainbow Alliance, which is dedicated to biodiversity conservation and social diversity. Through this project, the organization seeks to bring greater public attention to the often-overlooked connection between queer perspectives and the observation of nature.