If there was an unusual kind of collaboration, it would be collaborating with insects to create art. Insects are generally disgusting, annoying and scary. It’s almost funny how a creature so small can bring out so many different emotions in humans. But these three artists from across the globe seemed to have developed some bonding with the insects and used them to create an unusual art.
Hubert Duprat
Our first artist is France-born Hubert Duprat, who has been collaborating with the caddisfly larvae since the early 1980s. The caddisfly larvae live in fresh water and is known to construct elaborate protective cases or cocoons by collecting fragments of wood, sand, small stones and other debris and incorporating them into their cases which they spin out of silk. Duprat collects the larvae from their natural environment and transports them to his studio, where he carefully removes their protective casing and puts them in tanks filled with his own materials from which they can recreate their protective sheaths. Instead of debris, Dupart offers them flakes of gold and various semi-precious and precious stones, including turquoise, coral, sapphires, pearls, rubies, and diamonds. Within a few weeks tiny bejeweled cocoons are formed. Amazing.
Aganetha Dyck
Aganetha Dyck, a Canadian, is our second artist. Dyck works with live honeybees, introducing various man-made objects into their hives and allows the insects to build honeycomb over the objects. The process can take weeks, months and sometimes years until Dyck decides the sculpture is done. Her work has been drawing accolades from all over the world.
Steven Kutcher
California-based entomologist, teacher and artist, Steven Kutcher employs an entirely different approach. He takes bugs such as beetles, flies, cockroaches and more, and applies paint to their legs and then sets them free on a blank canvas. The insects scrawl across the surface leaving a trail of paint. By carefully manipulating their movements by applying external stimuli that the insects react to such as light, Kutcher and his insects create strange abstract paintings.
A darkling beetle at work.
“Eleven Steps”, by Hissing Cockroach
From top-left, in a clockwise direction: “Butterflies in the Garden”, “Sunrise”, “Olympic”, “Dancing Beetle”.
via SciArt in America