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Ken Dodd Nagasaki
Artist Who Turned Dead Cat Into Drone Plans To Build A Cow Helicopter
Bart Jansen was the focus of media controversy a few years back after images emerged online of his bizarrely morbid creation: a dead cat attached to a remote-control helicopter.
Enlisting the help of Arjen Beltman, a long-term friend and technical engineer, the Dutch artist is now reportedly working on a “mancopter,” which he explains in an interview with Business Insider,as a one-person helicopter in the shape of an animal, preferably a cow. He said:
“A cow could fit a person. So a cow is one of the options. That means we’d be using a cow indeed. Or any other animal we can lay our hands on that fits a person”
Jansen created the taxidermied cat quadcopter following the death of his beloved pet Orville, who had been ran over by a car back in 2012.
He decided that it would be a shame to simply bury his feline counterpart and arranged to continue his legacy in the most fitting way possible; while drawing inspiration from the cat’s name – Orville Wright, co-inventor of the world’s first successful airplane.
According to reports, Jansen stored Orville’s body in the freezer for six months before taking him to a reputable taxidermist who helped stuff the belated cat.
Beltman helped Jansen mount propellers to all four legs and installed a remote control engine to the inside of the cat’s stomach, before exhibiting the offbeat drone, known as Orvillcopter, at the Kunstrai art festival in Amsterdam.
Although the Los Angeles Times claimed the invention caused “global outrage” after footage went viral, the fact that a half-cat half-human machine could gain so much media traction was enough for Jansen, who subsequently went on to create his own enterprise.
A company that produces a wide range of taxidermy animal drones. Copter Company is a company that produces a wide range of taxidermy animal drones; and in 2013, they managed to obtain a recently-deceased ostrich from a local farm.
As Jansen and Beltman explain, the world’s first flying ostrich is very much “deployable” as a drone to keep a close eye on “untrustworthy wildebeests” over the vast African Savanna.
The pair have also pioneered the world’s first rat copter, shark jet, and are currently working on a badger submarine known as ‘Das Boot‘, after the infamous German U-boat film of the same name.
Bart Jansen was the focus of media controversy a few years back after images emerged online of his bizarrely morbid creation: a dead cat attached to a remote-control helicopter.
Enlisting the help of Arjen Beltman, a long-term friend and technical engineer, the Dutch artist is now reportedly working on a “mancopter,” which he explains in an interview with Business Insider,as a one-person helicopter in the shape of an animal, preferably a cow. He said:
“A cow could fit a person. So a cow is one of the options. That means we’d be using a cow indeed. Or any other animal we can lay our hands on that fits a person”

He decided that it would be a shame to simply bury his feline counterpart and arranged to continue his legacy in the most fitting way possible; while drawing inspiration from the cat’s name – Orville Wright, co-inventor of the world’s first successful airplane.

According to reports, Jansen stored Orville’s body in the freezer for six months before taking him to a reputable taxidermist who helped stuff the belated cat.
Beltman helped Jansen mount propellers to all four legs and installed a remote control engine to the inside of the cat’s stomach, before exhibiting the offbeat drone, known as Orvillcopter, at the Kunstrai art festival in Amsterdam.
Although the Los Angeles Times claimed the invention caused “global outrage” after footage went viral, the fact that a half-cat half-human machine could gain so much media traction was enough for Jansen, who subsequently went on to create his own enterprise.
A company that produces a wide range of taxidermy animal drones. Copter Company is a company that produces a wide range of taxidermy animal drones; and in 2013, they managed to obtain a recently-deceased ostrich from a local farm.
As Jansen and Beltman explain, the world’s first flying ostrich is very much “deployable” as a drone to keep a close eye on “untrustworthy wildebeests” over the vast African Savanna.
The pair have also pioneered the world’s first rat copter, shark jet, and are currently working on a badger submarine known as ‘Das Boot‘, after the infamous German U-boat film of the same name.



