Pink/Blue Grasshoppers (Madagascar) surrounded
by Clear Wing Cicadas (Malaysia)
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I had the chance to hear Angus speak, so I learned how she became "the Insect Lady." Angus is a Professor in Design Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison with an expertise in textiles. While on a research project in the Golden Triangle in Thailand, Angus happened upon a singing shawl decorated with the hard outside wings of green stag beetles. Their bright color was so striking Angus immediately dubbed them "nature's sequins."
One small portion of one exhibit wall |
Jennifer Angus with her Cabinet of Curiosities |
Angus had filled all but the top three layers of drawers with vignettes featuring insects teaching, reading and engaging in textile activities.Angus tasked herself with creating three drawers a day for the exhibit, a job she admitted was quite exhausting. The anthropomorphized insects are a stand-in for Angus herself.
Some drawers are always open for exhibitgoers to enjoy. But our timing was right, and we arrived just as additional drawers were being pulled at visitors' requests. Once the drawer was placed on a viewing table, the docent asked us what we thought was happening. It was a lively conversation.
Detail from one of the cabinet vignettes - Stag Beetle (Indonesia) reading up on climate change |
Not surprisingly, Angus is concerned about the environment and climate change. She was devastated by the fires in the Amazon Rainforest last summer. The matches are a reference to those fires and the fragility of nature.
Burning books was, of course, a historical practice of people who found the ideas within their covers dangerous. The clear implication is that Angus' tiny books deal with the science of climate change and steps that should be taken to slow its impact. Obviously, our reader hasn't gotten the word that this is fake news.
Specimen in the Ants' Pantry |
Angus was kind of outraged by this message that minimizes the value of the arts. How many of us listen to music while we work? Perhaps the grasshoppers' music sustained the ants as they were toiling away. We each have our contributions to make.
The entrance to the exhibit was a narrow hallway with several shelves with insect specimens too damaged for Angus to use in a future exhibit. She dubbed this portion of the show the ants' pantry. I get it if you are recoiling at the concept just as those visitors did at Angus' first show in Toronto. But trust me when I say each of the specimens is an example of beauty and art in nature.
Stay tuned for more from Angus' exhibit. The craziest part is yet to come!
"The Grasshopper and the Ant and Other Stories" by Jennifer Angus is on display at the St. Pete Museum of Fine Arts through January 5. Click here for more info.
I love it! What a thought provoking exhibit. I am still trying to put into words what i deduce from the conflicting feelings raised by the beauty of the exhibits and my tendency to recoil from bugs. I regret that I can't go back again to see/think a bit more. Sorry I spent so little time with the cabinet of curiosities. Interesting how Angus got started on using bugs as art supplies.
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