West Point: The Hunting of the Passenger Pigeon, focuses upon John James
Audubon’s 1813 description of the astonishing flight, and subsequent
slaughter, of wild Passenger Pigeons in the woods by the Ohio River
in Kentucky. Extinct since 1913, the once abundant Passenger Pigeon
is emblematic of the destructive effect human activity can inflict
upon the natural world. Part documentary, part natural history, part
road-movie, the film combines Audubon’s eye-witness account
of the devastating scenes of the birds’ massacre with contemporary
scenes of key locations in Kentucky, where the immense flocks once
filled the sky. The town of West Point, at the confluence of the Ohio
and Salt rivers, is where Audubon observed a vast flight of Passenger
Pigeons, numbering over a billion; the birds continually passing overhead
“for three days in succession.”
The film includes
a recording by Cartwright & Jordan of Coro, a little
known piece by the Bohemian composer Anthony Philip Heinrich, who
was an acquaintance of Audubon. Coro describes the overwhelming
effect of a huge flock of Passenger Pigeons, to the amazement of a
huntsman and a passing traveller.
West Point forms
part of a trilogy of short films (The Audubon Trilogy) which focus upon a range of species,
events & locations described by Audubon. Conjoining social, cultural
& ecological history, the films reference themes of human exploration
and romanticism; the past & present; our relationship to a disappearing
wilderness; species extinction, and economic rise and fall.
read
Devin Zuber's text on West Point here