Artist Imagines A Future In Which Pets Date, Have Sex, Fall In Love

What really happens in the secret life of a pet?
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Kuang-Yi Ku

Generally speaking, we think we know our pets. We read their behaviors and tend to their needs, all the while projecting onto them certain attributes and inclinations. Eventually we construct entire pet personalities, without them ever speaking a word.

But do we ever really know what they want, or what they need? 

Artist Kuang-Yi Ku has no pets of his own, but he’s observed his friend’s cat with interest. One day, he noticed the feline was in heat and acting rather strangely. “I was not sure what feeling the cat experienced but I just thought that I could feel it want to have sex,” Kuang-Yi explained in an email to The Huffington Post. “However, I am not a cat, so of course I could not understand what cats want.”

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Kuang-Yi Ku

This limitation intrigued Kuang-Yi, who doubts it’s possible to ever truly understand another person’s feelings, let alone another animal’s. Despite the lack of hope, he began his latest project by interviewing pet owners and veterinarians to find out more about the feelings of pets ― particularly, pets’ feelings about sex. Is sex just about reproduction for pets? Is pleasure a guiding factor? What about attraction? 

The first thing Kuang-Yi learned was how ubiquitous a practice castration is, along with the resounding opinion that it makes pets healthier, tamer, and more suitable for domestic living. The artist was shocked at the popularity of the response. “I just asked myself: ‘Do we (humans) really have the right to cut off another creature’s sex organ and even claim that it is for their own good?’” he explained. “However, if we don’t do that, how could we solve the sexual problem of pets?”

Kuang-Yi devised two potential solutions to this “sexual problem.” First, in lieu of castration, he’s opting for contraception. The artist is developing design propositions for spray-on condoms, as well as oral contraceptive pills ― of course, for pets. And second, to help pets find potential partners, Kuang-Yi conceived of a dating app specifically for pets. How else does anyone meet someone nowadays? 

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Kuang-Yi Ku

The dating app “PatPet,” currently in progress, is a collaboration between Kuang-Yi and Yi-Ling Wu (an engineer), Tzu-Yen Chen (an architect). and Wen-Yu Tsai (a filmmaker). The design vaguely resembles Tinder, Grindr and the like, with photo streams accompanied by users’ age, gender and personal preferences. Of course, all the images are of cats and dogs, but this much is obvious. 

Oftentimes, as Kuang-Yi work reminds us, pet owners and lovers imagine the animals in their lives as innocent companions, almost eternally infantile in their cuteness. But perhaps we’re forgetting something. Specifically, pets’ sexual needs and desires. Save for the occasional awkward chortle that results from witnessing a pup humping a pillow, do we ever appreciate the possibility that pets are sexual beings too? In an interview with Dazed Digital, Kuang-Yi compared the widespread denial of animals’ needs to the way we treat people with disabilities, often assumed to be “angels without lust or desire.”

The contraception and app projects are part of Kuang-Yi’s ongoing artist residency at Liverpool’s FACT, called “Pet’s Petting.” There, the artist is re-imagining the way humans will interact with their pets in the future ― the main difference being that pet owners will acknowledge and encourage their pets’ sexual needs decades from now.

“Maybe in the future, it will be a new practice of animal welfare,” Kuang-Yi said. 

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Kuang-Yi Ku

Kuang-Yi considers himself a multidisciplinary researcher, at once a biomaterial scientist, a visual artist, and a gender study theorist with a masters degree in dental science. His work often takes a hybridized art-meets-science approach to unpacking the invisible structures that govern the way we live.

As a queer man, Kuang-Yi often works to destabilize the norms that govern our bodies and desires. “For me, in my future imagination, medical technology is no longer controlled by the doctors and some experts,” Kuang-Yi said. “The knowledge is shared to every individual. So people in the future can choose their own body structure. In the queer utopia, every individual might look different, but sometimes there will be a group of people with similar appearance to share one identity.”

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Kuang-Yi Ku

Kuang-Yi’s work with pets, which he described as “fictional design,” has raised even more questions than he started with. Assuming in some distant future “Pets Petting” comes to fruition, what role would owners play in the facilitation of their pets’ sexual exploits? How would human architecture shift to address the newly adopted need to cater to their beloved animals’ urges?  

The artists imagine a brave new world with brave new animal sex hubs in it. Such centers of activity include, prospectively, a Love Hotel for Dogs in Taiwan, and a Dog’s Sex Park in France. Furthermore, Kuang-Yi hints at a universe in which owners relocate to live closer to their pets’ longterm partners, completely restructuring the way we live. The project, founded upon scientific research, straddles design and science fiction with a little bit of furry, erotic fanfic thrown in.

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Kuang-Yi Ku

In the end, Kuang-Yi embraces the silliness of his proposition while acknowledging the serious undercurrents beneath the surface ― the importance of sexual freedom for all, no matter how “other” they may be. According to Kuang-Yi’s forecasting, pet-centric architecture will be coming to a world near you in 2046.

Until then, humping pillows will have to do. 

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Kuang-Yi Ku

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Before You Go

30 Artist Names You Are Probably Pronouncing Wrong
Hieronymus Bosch(01 of30)
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We'll start with a real challenge. This one has plagued every fan of "The Garden of Earthly Delights." The correct pronunciation: Hi-RAHN-eh-mus Bosh. (credit:"The Garden of Earthly Delights" (Wikimedia))
Wassily Kandinsky(02 of30)
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Ok, so it's probably just Mr. Kandinsky's first name that baffled you. It's VUH-sill-ee KAN-din-skee. No Wa-silly necessary. We doubt the Russian artist would have appreciated that strange nickname. (credit:"Ladies in Crinolines" (Photo by Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images))
Katsushika Hokusai(03 of30)
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You can't truly admire "The Great Wave off Kanagawa" without properly pronouncing the artist's name, right? Say it with us: Hoe-koo-SIGH. Or Hock-sigh if you can muster the speed. (credit:"The Great Wave off Kanagawa" (Wikimedia))
Auguste Rodin(04 of30)
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The next time you're ogling the French sculptor's works, you can confidently comment on his impeccable craftsmanship with this helpful hint: It's Oh-GOOST Roh-DAN. (credit:"The Thinker" (JEAN-PIERRE CLATOT/AFP/Getty Images))
Georges Seurat(05 of30)
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"A Sunday on La Grande Jatte" (Wikimedia) (credit:No, it's not George. Try, Zhorzh Sir-AH.)
Antoni Gaudi(06 of30)
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The first name's a breeze. The second name is really just as easy: Gowdy (like Howdy). (credit:(Photo by: Virginia Sherwood/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images))
Le Corbusier(07 of30)
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Impress your architecture-loving friends with a swift and smooth pronunciation of the design pioneer's name: Luh Cor-boo-see-YAY. (credit:"Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes" (EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images))
Cimabue(08 of30)
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Remember this 13th century Italian painter and mosaicist? His name is pronounced Chee-ma-BOO-ay. (credit:"Maestà" (Wikimedia))
Mary Cassatt(09 of30)
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No, it's not Cass-et. It's Cuh-SAHT. Now you can truly appreciate her works' impressionist beauty. (credit:"Self-Portrait" (Wikimedia))
Albrecht Dürer(10 of30)
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Don't say Der-er. Try ALL-BREKT DEWR (or D-yer). (credit:"Self-Portrait" (Wikimedia))
Alberto Giacometti(11 of30)
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When admiring the work of the Swiss sculptor, painter, and printmaker, you should say, "I really enjoy the surreal experimentation of Ja-koe-met-ee." (credit:"La Main" (STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images))
Théodore Géricault(12 of30)
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No one paints a better dramatically grim raft scene than Zhair-i-KOE. (credit:"The Raft of the Medusa" (Wikimedia))
Louis Daguerre(13 of30)
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Without Da-GAIR, we would never have enjoyed the 19th century wonder that was the daguerreotype. (credit:"Boulevard du Temple" (Wikimedia))
Gustave Courbet(14 of30)
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The man behind the scandalous "Origin of the World" painting: Goo-STAHV Kor-BAY. (credit:"Self-Portrait" (Wikimedia))
Giotto(15 of30)
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Easy: JA-toe. (credit:"The Nativity" (Wikimedia))
Jean Auguste Dominque Ingres(16 of30)
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The French neoclassical painter looks as if his last name might be pronounced like "fingers" without the first consonant, but, in fact, it's An-gair (or Ang-r if your French accent is better than ours). (credit:"Napoleon on his Imperial throne" (Wikimedia))
Eadweard Muybridge(17 of30)
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So. Many. Syllables. Tough them out with this pronunciation tip: Ed-werd MY-bridge. (credit:"The Horse in Motion" (Wikimedia))
Yves Tanguy(18 of30)
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The illusive sixth vowel makes this one a bit overwhelming. The name is EVE TANG-EEE. (credit:"The Doubter" (Photo by Walter Mori / Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images))
Titian(19 of30)
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So short, yet somewhat difficult to decipher. Repeat after us: TISH-in. (credit:"The Rape of Europa" (WIkimedia))
Vincent van Gogh(20 of30)
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Yes, you can say "Vincent van Go" or "Vincent van Goff," but a closer pronunciation of the Dutch name would actually be vun Khokh. It's obviously debatable. (credit:"Self-Portrait" (AP Photo/ Kroeller-Mueller Museum))
Louise Bourgeois(21 of30)
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How do you pronounce the name of the French-American sculptor known for her spider-like creations? Boo-ZHWA (credit:"Spider Maman" (Photographer: David Ramos/Bloomberg via Getty Images))
Paul Gauguin(22 of30)
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The double "u" can really hold a person back. But it's just Paul Go-GAN. (credit:"Te aa no areois (The Seed of the Areoi)" (Wikimedia))
Jan Van Eyck(23 of30)
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Yawn vun EYE-k. Or "Fun" if you're feeling bold. (credit:"The Arnolfini Portrait" (Wikimedia))
Edvard Munch(24 of30)
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Never Mun-ch, always Moonk. (credit:"The Scream" (Wikimedia))
Renoir(25 of30)
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"Oh, what a beautiful Ren-WA painting you have." (credit:"Le Moulin de la Galette" (Wikimedia))
Edgar Degas(26 of30)
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You know he created more than a handful of ballet-inspired artworks, but you're unsure of how to say his name? Ed-gar Deh-GAH. (credit:"The Dance Class" (Wikimedia))
Eugene Delacroix(27 of30)
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The French Romantic's name is Yoo-gene Del-a-QUA. (Or Oo-zhen if you're feeling optimistic.) (credit:"Liberty Leading the People" (Wikimedia))
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec(28 of30)
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The painter and printmaker's full name is Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec-Monfa, but let's stick with the short version: AHN-ree deh Tah-LOOSE Lah-TREK. (credit:"Divan Japonais" (Wikimedia))
Francoise Gilot(29 of30)
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Known to some as the lover and muse of Pablo Picasso, this French painter's name is Fran-SWAZ Zhee-LOW. (Bonus points if you can phonetically differentiate between the female and male versions of this first name.) (credit:"Portrait of Francoise" by Pablo Picasso (Photo by Art Media/Print Collector/Getty Images))
Henri Matisse(30 of30)
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Nope, don't say Henry. It's Awn-REE Mah-TEESE. (credit:"Music" (Photo by Art Media/Print Collector/Getty Images))