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Winged and creepy-crawly creatures

Butterflies and beetles as art symbols

It may seem that the world of insects deliberately offers itself as a pack of allegories. Moths, after a series of transformations, hasten towards the sun, beetles dig into the soil, spiders spin cobwebs… Man has always admired, feared, and watched closely his cohabitants on the planet, imputing imaginary merits and faults to them. Agile insects have ‘taken on' a lot of masks, sneaked into a lot of canvases and settled down there.
Winged and creepy-crawly creatures

Wings of salvation

A butterfly that flits out of her confinement has become a representation of the divine cycle, death and resurrection. As a symbol of immortality, it can be found in Greek, Roman, and Ancient Egyptian myths. But none other than the Ancient Greek recognised a butterfly as a symbol of the soul: those gracious things flying in freedom are a natural equivalent of the freedom of human spirit as we understand it, and the Greek word ‘psyche' stands both for the butterfly and for the soul.
  • Portrait of a Woman of the Hofer Family, c. 1470, uncredited. National Gallery, London
  • Antonio Pisanello. Portrait of a Princess (Ginevra d’Este)
By the 18th century, the inquisitive-minded Europeans had found the life cycle of insects to be an allegory of salvation in the framework of Christian beliefs. Voracious caterpillars reminded people of themselves condemned to hard earthly toil in filth and pain. And the cocoon was viewed as a sort of coffin in which nature confined its creatures at the end of their existence. But the light-winged belle emerging from the chrysalis had a wonderful chance to live after death and fly around free. By the way, collecting butterflies was considered quite a decent hobby, especially for the clergy.
In Dosso Dossi’s canvas Jupiter, Mercury, and Virtue (1522—1524), butterflies are featured in a curi

In Dosso Dossi’s canvas Jupiter, Mercury, and Virtue (1522—1524), butterflies are featured in a curious way. The painter shows Mercury who does not let Virtue into Jupiter’s palace because the god is busy painting butterflies and cucumber blossoms. Thus, creative leisure pursuits appear to be of greater importance for the Olympians than their responsibilities.

The miracle of a caterpillar’s transformation into a perfect flying creature reflected in a somewhat specific way in van Gogh’s art. Meditating on the amazing metamorphoses of insects, the painter envisaged the embodiment of hope and a metaphor of the human ability to transform — envisaged but on other planets. In his letter to his friend Émile Bernard (June 1888), van Gogh wrote,
‘… we are at liberty to feel fairly serene about the possibilities of painting in a better and different existence, an existence altered by a phenomenon that is perhaps no more ingenious and no more surprising than the transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly … The existence of a painter-butterfly would be played out on the countless celestial bodies.'
Van Gogh compared insects' life cycle to lives of brothel residents, of whom he had first-hand knowledge, — and saw a hope for the fallen women’s spiritual regeneration. He wrote, She is seeking, seeking, seeking — does she herself know what? Might she be transformed one day like a grub into a butterfly?'
Many a butterfly can be found in canvases by Salvador Dalí, who loved macabre subjects.

The paintings below are often, quite erroneously, ascribed by art lovers to Salvador Dalí. They are surrealistic, of course, but their author is today’s successful painter Vladimir Kush, now a US resident.
One of the most notable pieces, with butterflies as the subject, is I am Become Death, Shatterer of Worlds (2006) by Damien Hirst. It is composed of the wings of these insects. Generally, butterflies are involved in a whole series of Hirst’s works. In 2012, the artist created an installation In and Out of Love that made him an object of heavy criticism from animal activists. Nine thousand butterflies it was made of were slowly dying in the period from April to September 2012, when the installation was on display in Tate Modern, London.
James Christensen. Fish lovers around
How much better is the fantasy artist James Christensen, who, sadly, passed away in early 2017. For him, butterfly wings are a feature of the fairy folk, and of angels, too, — obviously, a symbol of the soul soaring high.

The dragonfly of Love

The frolicking dragonfly, as well as most insects, was hardly favoured by Christianity — rather, it was viewed as one of the Devil’s forms. So, if in a picture, the baby Jesus is tightly gripping an insect in his little hand, it is more than just mischief, but an evidence of the triumph of Good over Evil.
But in the 19th century, with the rapid development of entomology, goldsmiths rehabilitated the dragonfly (and other insects, too) and turned it into art works of singular beauty. It broadened the range of jewellery pieces due to a variety of new forms introduced. Now, along with traditional butterflies and scarabs, womanly charms were decorated with bees, dragonflies, grasshoppers, spiders. They were especially characteristic of the Art Nouveau era.

The Beautiful Leukanida

Like many unusually-looking insects, the stag beetle (Lucanus cervus) used to be believed to possess magical power. And its presence in religious paintings must have been due to its symbolic significance for then Christians. A stag was frequently used in Christian pictures as a symbol of Christ, who was considered the guardian of plants and animals, and whose birth defeated evil and brought salvation.

In the 14th century, the stag beetle started losing its symbolism
Exquisite still-lifes and marvelous plants on canvases: flowers do not only beautify the appearance, but also open secret meanings, and convey messages to the attentive researcher. Leafing through captivating Herbarium, we're examining enigmatic garden of flower symbols.

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Symbolism is an art movement that has been reflected in painting, literature and music. It emerged in the 1870s-1880s in France, later spread to Belgium, Norway, and the Russian Empire. It reached the peak of popularity at the turn of the 19th-20th centuries. Symbolism is characterized by sadness, introspection and understatement: as if an artist came to quiet despair, but he was too shy to talk about these feelings, so he painted them.



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and eventually, became a favourite subject for a lot of artists. A classic example is Dürer's famous drawing made in 1505. As a Renaissance artist, he believed that Art was omnipresent in nature, and a real artist was the one who could reveal it. So, choosing an insect as the main object for an art piece was, for those days, something unheard of, as most of Dürer's contemporaries looked down at them as the lowliest creatures.
The German painter and draughtsman Hans Hoffmann (1530—1592), the leading figure among those who followed and developed Albrecht Dürer's traditions, was so assiduous in copying his hero’s pictures, that many of his works were later sold as Dürer's originals.

In the early 20th century, in 1912, these insects got fame as film stars when they became the main characters of the animated chivalric parody The Beautiful Leukanida, or The War of Longhorn Beetles and Stag Beetles directed by Władysław Starewicz.

For honey, a fly will even come from Baghdad

In the 17th century, flies and other pests were often placed in pictures to protect the commissioners' homes from them. But prior to this, flies had, too, frequently ‘run' on the margins of medieval manuscripts and horologia (Books of hours) as decorative elements. As early as in the 15th century, they found their way into pictures. For some time, they were used as religious symbols of sin, decay, death, and melancholy. Besides, in Christianity, flies are related to Beelzebub (Baalzebub), a deity of the ancient Assyrians and Phoenicians, who in the New Testament was titled ‘chief of the devils.' There is a legend that, with flies, he once sent plague upon Canaan. But in the history of painting, the annoying bug that is still associated with filth, had its moment of glory when it was used to prove excellent artistic mastery. The anecdote is told by Giorgio Vasari in his The Lives. Once Giotto, an apprentice of the Florentine painter Cimabue, painted a fly on a face in one of his teacher’s pictures when Cimabue was absent. The fly was so remarkably lifelike that Cimabue, on his return, tried several times to brush it off. Well, the annoying nature of this bug is really symbolic.

Having a spider is having its cobweb

People have always detested spiders and their webs. That is why the arthropod was associated with evil designs, scheming, and fornication. However, this wildlife wonder, too, has found its place in art. As a symbol of fear and sorrow, it can be seen in early works by the French symbolist painter Odilon Redon. Later, he switched to the multi-coloured palette and started painting flowers — and butterflies!
Odilon Redon. Chariot
Chariot
1912, 99.7×74.9 cm
The most famous and the largest spider — to be exact, a female one — is called Maman. It is a nine-m

The most famous and the largest spider — to be exact, a female one — is called Maman. It is a nine-metre bronze, stainless steel, and marble sculpture by Louise Bourgeois. That is how the author herself explains the choice of the character which is obviously dear to her, The Spider is an ode to my mother. She was my best friend. Like a spider, my mother was a weaver. My family was in the business of tapestry restoration, and my mother was in charge of the workshop. Like spiders, my mother was very clever. Spiders are friendly presences that eat mosquitoes. … So, spiders are helpful and protective, just like my mother.'

Generally, nowadays, artists never hesitate to turn to the world of insects and arachnids as a means of overcoming their own fears. An example is the world created by the modern artist Travis Louie, which is populated by human fancies, mythical creatures that help against arachnophobia.

Chosen by Napoleon

Iconography is often quite inconsistent in treating insects. They can be viewed as something evil and as a means of salvation and an object of devotion. The bee, a symbol of self-sacrifice, can also signify transience, or the onset of an illness, or it can be a reminder of death.
But the busy supplier of honey once had its glory hour when it ascended the throne as a decoration of Napoleon’s royal mantle.

The thing was that, because of his Corsican descent, Napoleon had no right on a coat of arms with th

The thing was that, because of his Corsican descent, Napoleon had no right on a coat of arms with the fleur-de-lis, an old heraldic symbol. Then, as his personal emblem, he chose the bee, because, from a distance, it looked like the fleur-de-lis turned upside down. The bee, a symbol of immortality and rebirth, became a link between the new dynasty and the ancient roots of the French state. Wearing, during his coronation, a mantle with the Merovingian bees (they were the artefacts found in 1653, in Tournai, in the grave of Childeric, Merovech’s son), Napoleon demonstrated that he was a rightful successor to the rulers of the past.

The mystery performance of the still life

On abandoning canonical iconography and pious meditations, artists focused on ordinary, everyday objects — and directed their eyes down. And found there a most diverse and yet unexplored world. However, they did not give up trying to find the Creator’s hand in the harmony of images. In still lifes painted in the 17th century, objects often contain a hidden allegory of all mundane, of the certainty of death (Vanitas), of the Holy Passion and the Resurrection. In these allegories, bugs and butterflies always play certain roles like actors in a medieval mystery play.
Detailed, accurate, elegant drawings by animalists, especially by members of the fair sex (Rachel Ruysch, Maria Sibylla Merian), put forward science against misconceptions of their contemporaries who believed that insects were evil and that witches are to blame for their fantastic transformations.

How to creep into auctions and exhibitions

The scandal-ridden Belgian artist Jan Fabre’s fondness of insects is hereditary: his grandfather was the celebrated entomologist Jean-Henri Fabre, the author of the book Insect Life. Jan’s striking exhibition in Kiev aroused curiosity of the sophisticated public, and the shocking exposition in the Hermitage, Saint Petersburg, caused a serious scandal. One of Fabre’s notorious techniques is mosaic made of iridescent wings of jewel beetles. He used them to cover the surface of, for example, the ceilings and chandeliers of the royal palace in Brussels — thus protesting against his country’s imperialistic past. Léopold II and his policy of the annexation of the Congo region (actually it was converting the territory to the king’s personal use) resulted in the depopulation of Congo from 30 million people in 1884 to 15 million in 1915. For Fabre’s installations and sculptures, jewel beetles were delivered directly from Congo (where they are food, like oysters in Europe) — the artist had settled this with restaurant-keepers.

A detail of the project From the Feet to the Brain
A detail of the project From the Feet to the Brain
Photo from: theartnewspaper.ru
Photo from: theartnewspaper.ru
Beetle by the conceptual artist Ilya Kabakov can be called a victorious piece of art. The painting w
Beetle by the conceptual artist Ilya Kabakov can be called a victorious piece of art. The painting was sold in February 2008 at Phillips de Pury for almost $ 6,000,000, which was the record sum for a post-war Russian art object.
Well, now you see that insects, once worshiped, amazing and disgusting, helpful and harmful, have occupied a place of pride in the history of painting.