Skip to main content
Collections Menu
A group of various animals looks at cave paintings of humans committing violence towards each other
They Made Themselves Extinct
A group of various animals looks at cave paintings of humans committing violence towards each other

They Made Themselves Extinct

Artist (American, born England, 1951)
Date1997
MediumLithograph on paper
Dimensionsplate/image: 20 1/8 in x 14 7/8 in; sheet/object: 20 1/8 in x 14 7/8 in
ClassificationPrint
Credit LineMary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, gift of University of Tennessee, Knoxville Print Workshop
Object number2005.6.3
Text Entries

One Book One Northwestern, 2021–22

Through her artwork, Sue Coe creates awareness around environmental issues, animal rights, factory farming, AIDS, and other social justice causes. In the satiric print, They Made Themselves Extinct, several species of animals co-exist in a small, confined space, while two nearly identical humans are on the verge of killing one another. The humans are surrounded by symbols of technology—airplanes, television, a computer—as well as bodies and severed body parts. The print challenges assumptions that humans represent a higher consciousness. In Coe’s print, humankind’s belief in progress drives its demise, while the animals are intellectually and spiritually superior.

Combining text and image, Coe works in the tradition of socially critical printmaking, and continues the legacies of such artists as Honoré Daumier and Käthe Kollwitz. With a background in editorial cartoons, Coe brings issues into sharp focus for the purpose of raising awareness and bringing about change. With her critiques of meat production and consumption, exploitation of resources, and species extinction, Coe’s concerns align with many themes in The Story of More. As the artist has stated, "I’m not disheartened, I’m angry…. Our society always deals with the back end of the problem like adding more prisons while cutting back on education. More guns instead of expanding mental health care.  We can’t outrun viruses and climate change. Our choice is either change or perish."

Our collection database is a living document. We update our records frequently. If you have any additional information or notice an error, please contact printroom@northwestern.edu.