Ninety-six pieces of 13-by-19-inch transparent film lined windows at Philadelphia鈥檚 Temple University this past spring, each donning an artful illustration designed to make the glass more visible to birds. One piece of film featured origami cranes; another showed birds perched on a musical staff, arranged to signify notes in a composition called 鈥淭he Cardinal.鈥 In crafting their work, the creators鈥攕tudents at Temple鈥檚 Tyler School of Art鈥攆ollowed strict guidelines on how to prevent bird strikes with windows. 鈥淔rom the sublime to the whimsical, it was all very inventive,鈥 says Alice Drueding, Tyler鈥檚 graphic and interactive design head.
One hundred million to a billion birds die annually from crashing into glass, according to the American Bird Conservancy, and more than 1,000 die each year on Temple鈥檚 campus. 鈥淲hat we want to do is use this as an opportunity to make people aware that this is a potential solution,鈥 says 爆料公社 Pennsylvania鈥檚 outreach coordinator in Philadelphia, Keith Russell, who dreamed up the exhibit and helped judge the best design. Surface Care, a New York鈥揵ased company, is interested in printing and testing some of the films at Temple, where Russell will monitor their effectiveness. 鈥淲e want to get the data so that we can say yes, they鈥檙e not only pretty,鈥 Russell says, 鈥渂ut they work.鈥
This piece originally ran in the May-June 2012 issue as "Artful Dodging."