Artist Never Pulls Wings off Her Flies

pest-top

You might mistake Amy Swartz for an entomologist, a scientist who pins insects onto boards for categorization and display. But she’s a trickster, an artist with a wicked sense of humour who fuses tiny toy heads and bodies onto flies, beetles, butterflies and bees.

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Her 2,500 altered insects form irreverent collages in the traditional glass-topped cases that museums use.  The three-year compilation started when she idly pinned the head of a toy soldier from her husband’s childhood onto a dead insect in her kitchen and called it “Moth Man.” (Below: An exhibit at Angell Gallery, Toronto)

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On now at Cambridge Galleries, Swartz’s Pest exhibit gives human characteristics to the tiny creatures in displays that mimic fantastic battles or represent the larger issues of environment, death, and consumer culture.

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Swartz constructs a world where monstrous butterflies are herded by a game crew of winged warriors, or warrior bees stand off against a rag-tag crew of lesser bugs in an epic entomological confrontation.   -From a review contained in Exhibition Notes for an upcoming show

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Swartz says her collections are intended to foster a sense of wonder and intimacy with the natural, imaginary and everyday world that is generally overlooked.

This work is my reflection on the restrained chaos of life, our own pest-like behavior as a species, as well as our absurd attempt to control the natural world and our mortality. My intention is for this work to serve as a metaphor for overpopulation and extinction while at the same time retaining the sense of life’s beauty and eccentricity.

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Below, the pins carry names of communities in the sensitive Niagara Escarpment, a world biosphere reserve.

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All of the insects used in Swartz’s art died of natural causes and some have been donated to the artist.

 
Amy Swartz is a Toronto-based visual artist with an MFA from York University, a BFA from Emily Carr University of Art and Design and a BA from Trent University in Cultural Studies.

See her C.V. here.

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Categories: Art, Installation

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13 Comments on “Artist Never Pulls Wings off Her Flies”

  1. 01/30/2013 at 11:05 am #

    wow amazing

  2. 01/30/2013 at 1:36 pm #

    Okay, I’m a bit freaked out by this macabre beauty, and impressed with its message!

    • 01/30/2013 at 2:30 pm #

      I had a similar initial reaction, became fascinated, and ended up loving it all.

  3. Micah
    01/30/2013 at 4:29 pm #

    Hilarious, bizarre and oh-so-fabulous! Thank you for sharing.

  4. 01/31/2013 at 1:11 am #

    The winged soldiers kinda scare me. They somehow remind me of the locust swarm from the bible :D but I do love the imagination and creativity of the artist.

    • 02/01/2013 at 12:48 pm #

      I know what you mean – sort of like scenes from an insect version of Revelation.

  5. 02/03/2013 at 12:23 pm #

    OMG! I love this! I mentioned I love bugs? This is just crazy cool. I’m sharing this one!

    • 02/03/2013 at 10:32 pm #

      Yep, you mentioned – and I thought of you, as a consequence. Thought you’d like it.

  6. 02/17/2013 at 3:57 pm #

    These are awesome!

  7. 02/17/2013 at 9:11 pm #

    Hi Krista – nice to hear from you. Agreed, they’re amazing. I love the story of how she began the series (at her kitchen table, with a moth, man!)

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Found while foraging (April 2, 2013) | Inspiring Science - 04/02/2013

    [...] Amy Swartz combines body parts from toys and insects in her strange, fantastic creations. [...]

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