Monuments for pigeons embrace several aspects; peace and the ecocentric view of life. Public monuments in cities are often habitats and resting places for pigeons, with several being equestrian statues within themes of war and holocaust. Human absence from places can give animals and nature the peace required for biotope diversity. In places that have become inaccessible to people, such as the border between North and South Korea and Chernobyl, animals and nature are protected. Despite environmental threats, the anthropocentric view of existence is reprehensible and downright dangerous.
Monument for pigeons originates from the containers for DDT dumped in nature, which in the middle of the 20th century were launched as a harmless way to kill insects and to keep nature clean and tidy, an approach that later proved to be a threat to the condition of all living things . DDT has been replaced by other insecticides, called biocides by Rachel Carson, just as dangerous and treacherous as DDT.