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Hox Zodiac animal gathering celebrating the
LUNAR NEW YEAR
with artists and scientists born in the Year of the RABBIT!

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Louis Pasteur, with two white RABBITS in his arms.
Color lithograph by T. Chartran [T.], 1887. Credit: Wellcome Collection.

On Jan. 22, 2023, more than a billion people globally will welcome the Year of the Water Rabbit – or the Year of Cat, depending on which cultural traditions they follow – as the start of the Lunar New Year.

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Victoria Vesna &
Siddharth Ramakrishnan

Invite you to participate in an Art Science celebration of the RABBIT/HARE/CAT

 

SUNDAY, January 22, 2023
10:00 am PST / 1:00 pm EST / 7:00 pm CET


 
REGISTER HERE

We are excited to prelaunch the HOX ZODIAC cookbook featuring the RABBITS:

 Featuring fantastic artists and scientists born in the sign of the RABBIT/HARE/CAT
.

 

Jim Gimzewski
Pat Badani
Marta de Menezes
Alison Hiltner
Santiago Torres
Robertina Sebjanic
Tatiana Kourochkina


 

Recommended ingredients  for the RABBIT/HARE/CAT

**EAT OR BE EATEN**

Heavenly Creature of the RABBIT/HARE/CAT:
The Green Dragon
 
Chinese dragons were considered divine beings, creating order out of the chaos. As one of the five celestial beasts, the azure dragon of the East symbolizes the element wood, life, sunrise, spring and health. He embodies strength, luck, fertility, vitality, and power like no other being.

The Rabbit is the fourth of all zodiac animals. Legend has it the Rabbit was proud—arrogant even—of its speed. He was neighbors with Ox and always made fun of Ox’s slowness. One day, the Jade Emperor said the zodiac order would be decided by the order in which the animals arrived at his party. Rabbit set off at daybreak. But when he got there, no other animals were in sight. Thinking he would be first, he went off to the side and napped. However, when he woke up, three other animals had already arrived. One of them was the Ox he had always looked down upon. The Rabbit is also associated with the Earthly Branch măo and the hours 5—7 in the morning. In terms of yin and yang, the Rabbit is yin.

In Chinese culture, rabbits represent the moon. Some say it is because the shadows of the moon resemble a rabbit. Others say it is because of the rabbit’s pure characteristics. Source: chinesenewyear.net -- Image description: Rabbit in Landscape with Clouds, Moon, Two Constellations, Rocks, Bamboo, Flowering Shrubs, Lingzhi Fungus, Pine, and Water Plants. Period: Qing dynasty (1644–1911), Qianlong period (1736–95) Culture: China - Medium: Silk.


While we consume, co-habit, collaborate, and even

create animals around us - we as humans forget that

we ourselves are animals. Animals serve as our

foods, offer companionship, are sacrificed for

science and are entwined in our myths and stories -

yet always take a back seat as we move forward.

 
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