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These Artists Want to Save the Rhinos. How? By Building the World’s Biggest Rhino Sculpture

Gillie and Marc Schattner, The Last Three, rendering, 2017.
Gillie and Marc Schattner, The Last Three, rendering, 2017.

 

A sculpture coming to New York’s East Village might seem light-hearted, but it actually carries a somber message about the poaching of wild animals. Consisting of three rhinos rendered in bronze and stacked atop on another, The Last Three depicts the last three living Northern White Rhinos, a species bound for extinction.

Australian artists Gillie and Marc Schattner are putting their money where their mouth is, ponying up some $150,000 (Australian) to fabricate the life-size sculpture, which will stand some 16 feet high. Claiming the work will be the world’s largest rhino sculpture, the duo has launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise the final $50,000 necessary to create the piece. (It’s an “all-or nothing” fundraiser, and it may be a stretch; thus far, the appeal has raised just $12,568 US, with $37,255 to go.) A website promoting the project promises that “notable celebrities” will be there to unveil the work, though it doesn’t name them. The site also indicates that the artists will approach heavy hitters like Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Middleton, both known for their conservationist efforts.

The duo boasts a history of solo exhibitions dating back to 1993, appearing at venues throughout Australia and Asia as well as various iterations of the Affordable Art Fair. They were inspired to create the rhino piece after spending time with the three rhinos this spring at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy, in Kenya. The eldest, a male, has too low a sperm count to reproduce, and the two younger rhinos, both females, are infertile. (The conservancy is, however, hoping to preserve the species through in vitro fertilization and stem cell technology. it aims to raise $1 million to fund the effort.)

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