Fund Your Utopia Without Me.™

04 June 2012

Cat Scratch Fever: Man Turns His Beloved, Dead Cat Into Flying Helicopter. Not Kidding.



M2RB:




 It's nothin dangerous
I feel no pain
I've got to ch-ch-change
You know you got it when you're going insane 

They give me cat scratch fever
Cat scratch fever

 



By Suzannah Hills, Daily Mail

Many animal lovers find it hard to part with their pets when they die.

So when cat Orville, named after the famous aviator Orville Wright, was run over by a car, his artist owner decided to turn him into a permanent piece of artwork as the ultimate tribute by transforming him into a flying helicopter.

Dutch artist Bart Jansen first stuffed Orville before teaming up with radio control helicopter flyer Arjen Beltman to build a specially-designed flying mechanism to attach to the cat. 

Paws for thought: Cat Orville was turned into a helicopter by his artist owner Bart Jansen, pictured right,after he was run over by a car
Paws for thought: Cat Orville was turned into a helicopter by his artist owner Bart Jansen, pictured right,after he was run over by a car 


Flying high: Bart Jensen has dubbed his cat art The Orvillecopter
Flying high: Bart Jensen has dubbed his cat art The Orvillecopter 



Cat overhead: Radio control helicopter flyer Arjen Beltman, pictured back right, controls The Orvillecopter
Cat overhead: Radio control helicopter flyer Arjen Beltman, pictured back right, controls The Orvillecopter


The end result, named the Orvillecopter, is now on show at the Kunstrai art festival in Amsterdam where visitors can watch Orville flying for themselves.


Jansen said the Orvillecopter is 'half cat, half machine', and part of a visual art project to pay tribute to his cat Orville.

Jansen, part of the art cooperative Generaal Pardon, said: 'After a period of mourning he received his propellers posthumously.'

He added that Orville will soon be 'flying with the birds' stating: 'Oh how he loved birds. He will receive more powerful engines and larger props for his birthday. So this hopping will soon change into steady flight.'


Moving art: The Orvillecopter is on display in a gallery during at the Kunstrai art festival in Amsterdam
Moving art: The Orvillecopter is on display in a gallery during at the Kunstrai art festival in Amsterdam 



Tribute: Dutch artist Bart Jansen made the The Orvillecopter as part of a visual art project to pay tribute to his cat Orville
Tribute: Dutch artist Bart Jansen made the The Orvillecopter as part of a visual art project to pay tribute to his cat Orville


Putting on the finishing touches: Bart Jansen, left, made the cat contraption with radio control helicopter flyer Arjen Beltman, pictured right
Putting on the finishing touches: Bart Jansen, left, made the cat contraption with radio control helicopter flyer Arjen Beltman, pictured right




The Orvillecopter's First Flight 







Hardest Hit:  For not thinking of it first, several members of the Official Raving Loony Monster Party, parts of Appalachia, and Doug Giles, whose Taxidermist Heaven on Earth Man-Cave just seems incomplete without an Orvillecopter.

No comments: