the project

I haven’t been very diligent in posting updates on the progress of my big project on bees, (entitled “not by chance alone”) for the most part because it is difficult to share the endless bouts of self-doubt, but also because the documentation that I have been doing (consistently) has produced iffy photos often taken under poor lighting conditions. Stitching together images of varying exposures is tedious.

.A couple of months ago, I decided that I really needed to lay the entire project out to see how the parts fit together and to give me a better idea how to proceed towards completion. It would be the first time I would see the entire project together.

My friend, the artist Elizabeth MacKenzie, helped me with the huge undertaking of putting together the 300 or so puzzle-like sheets that I had completed. I got permission to use the gym at my partner’s school (the administration and staff were very kind to allow me the freedom to do this). Sitting on the bleachers and working from a master diagram, Elizabeth would yell out the number and letter code of each sheet and give me directions where to lay a particular section. Here’s s shot of the “installation’ – it really does help to show the scale of the work.

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Elizabeth was also the official photographer for this session, so I am very grateful to her for the images, her GPS and puzzle-making skills (:-) and the wealth of knowledge and experience in art-making which she so generously shares with me!

We still weren’t able to get the complete piece in one shot without massive distortion, so here are sections of the work: this one is the left side.

july 3 Left Side

 

Here’s part of the left and the centre portion:

July 3 Centre and left side

 

 

And the right side:

July 3 Right Side Flora

 

What a day this was!

hidden in nature

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I am always on the lookout for artists who work with or have worked with bees as their subject matter. Recently I found the catalogue for a beautiful suite of aquatints created by the English artist Graham Sutherland (1903-1980) in 1977. Sutherland made a total of 14 aquatints, plus drawings for this project.

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Here’s an extract from the catalogue’s introduction, written by Bernhard Baer:

Sutherland has been attracted to the drawing of insects in his previous work. What urged him to probe the life of the bees in this suite is the existence of a strange hermetic world, perfectly ordered and full of dramatic incidents;

the dance of the foraging bees to indicate distance and direction of sources of nectar and pollen; the emergence of the queen who proceeds to kill all rivals in their cells; the mating flight of the queen pursued by drones who die in the act of copulation; the exodus of the swarm to found new colonies.

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It is the challenge of a strange and mysterious world which excites his imagination, a challenge which is at the centre of all his work:to unveil the mystery which lies behind the mystery; to probe an alien cosmos.(Bernard Baer)

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The relationship and mutual dependence between bees and flowers, the most important agent in their evolution, appeals to Sutherland’s vision. He always sees all nature whole. (Bernard Baer)

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Where Faust despaired of unveiling the innermost of nature,

Sutherland explores and returns with magic signs to enlighten us. His power of evocation fulfils Durer’s words:

Art is hidden in Nature, he who can pull it out, has found it.

(Bernhard Baer).

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This is my favorite image of the series, the dark depth of the hive, the queen surrounded by her attendants, contrasting with the golden light of honey (?), of the comb (?) of the sun (?) that rules the cycles of life in nature.