Tag: Bugs

  • Thursday, August 19, 1:00 pm – Beautiful Bugs and Butterflies: Insects in the Art History Canon, Online

    From the sacred scarab in ancient Egypt to the fabulous dragonflies, beetles, and butterflies in Europe’s Art Nouveau period, insects have continuously played an inspirational role for artists across history. Join Context Travel online on August 19 at 1 pm as we survey the key paintings, drawings, etchings, sculptures, and precious jewelry within the art history canon which were inspired by a variety of insects. Ranging from scary creepy-crawlies such as beetles, ants, caterpillars, grasshoppers, and spiders, or flying bugs like fat flies, butterflies, moths, and dragonflies – no insect will be too frightening or too humble to be left out of our conversation. Our discussion will present the unique beauty of bugs in a new light, as well as spotlighting the craftsmanship of the artists.

    Together we will contextualize the historical significance of Egypt’s sacred scarab (an amulet), the Renaissance silver-guild objects by the German artist Wenzel Jamnitzer, insect paintings by Maria Sibylla Merian, up to René Lalique’s intricately designed insect jewelry. Even to the present day, artists are drawn to beetles and bugs. There is nothing scary about these impressive art objects – we need only fear their high price tags at auction!

    Led by an expert on art history, Dr. Alette Fleischer, this interactive seminar will showcase our fascination with the beauty of bugs and beetles. Designed to inform curiosity as well as future travels, participants will come away with an increased appreciation for how artists transformed insects into gorgeous artworks. Amsterdam-born Alette Fleischer has a degree in Art History and a PhD in 17th Dutch History, focusing on gardens, science, and technology. She has curated several exhibitions, publishes articles, presents lectures, and a proud Context Expert. For Context Travel, Alette has led the Rijksmuseum tours many times. Motto: staying curious is key for being a good historian.

    $36.50 – register at www.contextlearning.com

  • Tuesday, June 23, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Insects for Beginners Online

    Tuesday, June 23, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Insects for Beginners Online

    Insects may be the most important animals on the planet! If you want to learn why, as well as how to tell a beetle from a true bug, a moth from a butterfly, or a hover fly from a bee this is the program for you, to be held on June 23 from 7 – 9. The Mass Audubon/Drumlin Farm team will focus on the most common insect orders and discuss their unique characteristics and how to recognize them.

    To accommodate safe distancing during the Covid-19 pandemic, this program will be offered as an online meeting with discussion.

    You will receive a Microsoft Teams link and instructions on how to join us the day before the program. Registration is required. Register online or call 781-259-2255 to register by phone. For your own security, DO NOT send credit card information via email. $25 for Mass Audubon members, $30 for nonmembers. For more information contact Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary 208 South Great Road Lincoln, MA 01773 drumlinfarm@massaudubon.org

  • Through November 24 – Wonder World: Three Artists Define Nature’s Magic

    Berkshire Botanical Garden opens its debut exhibition with works by painter Susan Merrill and photographers Jane McWhorter and John MacGruer in its newly restored and renovated Center House, home to three new galleries featuring art inspired by the natural world.

    The new Anna and Frederick Henry Leonhardt Galleries will host its first exhibition, Wonder World: Three Artists Define Nature’s Magic, bringing to the new gallery space three distinctly unique artistic interpretations of insects, plant life, and nature. “We wanted our first exhibition to celebrate the talents of local artists who beautifully represent a larger creative community in the Berkshires,” said Matthew Larkin, BBG Board Chairman, who has overseen the design and development of the Center House galleries. “These three artists truly find their inspiration in the Berkshire landscape; a perfect match for the Garden’s galleries.”

    BUGS, a collection of paintings in pen and ink with acrylic by Susan Merrill, focuses on beneficial bugs and insects — the monarch butterfly, praying mantis, soldier beetle, dragonfly, green lacewing, and nematode — “various kinds,” she says, “so camouflaged, so elegant and beautiful.” Susan’s work has been exhibited at many venues, especially in the Berkshires where she makes her home. Her exhibition will include both original paintings and prints.

    John MacGruer and Jane McWhorter, who collectively run the full-service communications company Blue Sky Productions, each bring their signature photographic styles to the exhibition with their collection, BOTANICALS. McWhorter, best known for her large, elegant and evocative images of plant life, focuses on the form and texture of her organic subjects, which are both beautiful and compelling. MacGruer’s background in film is evidenced in this exhibition through a visually infused sense of motion, particularly in his stunning photographs capturing milkweed seedpods dispersed by wind. Both photographers have exhibited their work throughout the Berkshires and beyond. Jane McWhorter’s Sunflower pictured below.

    The galleries are located in the original, C 1700s section of the renovated Center House, considered to be one of the oldest structures in Stockbridge. The galleries are open Saturdays, 10 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. and Sundays, 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. and weekdays by appointment by calling 413 298-3926. The exhibition runs through November 24.

  • Sunday, July 30, 10:30 am – 12:00 noon – What’s Buggin’ Me?

    Join Massachusetts Horticultural Society on Sunday, July 30 at 10:30 am for a stroll through the vegetable gardens at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, with Sue Scheufele from the UMass Extension Vegetable Program. We will learn to identify common insect and disease pests, and the damage they can cause to vegetable and herb plants. We will discuss organic management strategies that are available to home gardeners including use of mulches, row covers, bio-based pesticides and more.

    Hannah Traggis manages Mass Hort’s edible gardens throughout The Gardens at Elm Bank. She oversees the Seed to Table vegetable garden which produces more than 4,000 pounds of produce each year to support our educational mission and local food pantries. Mass Hort Members: $20 General Admission: $30. Register online at www.masshort.org.

  • Wednesday, July 18, 10:00 am – Snakes, Bugs, and Dragonflies, Oh My!

    Families interested in learning about snakes, bugs and dragonflies are invited to come to Sugar Hollow Farm at 10AM on Wednesday, July 18, where MassWildlife’s Peter Mirick and Dave Small from DCR will talk about these creatures and even offer an opportunity to touch a live snake! Registration is $5/person with a $20 cap for families. Veterans and servicemen and -women’s children are free with proof-of-service. Sugar Hollow Farm is located on 425 Queen Lake Road in Phillipston (Rte 101). Call (978) 652-5186 or go to www.sugarhollowfarm.com.

  • Saturday, March 5, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Insect Planet Family Festival

    The Harvard Museum of Natural History, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge,  will be buzzing with dozens of family activities on Saturday, March 5, from 9 – 5, as we explore the amazing world of insects and their relatives, spiders, crustaceans, and the many other creatures that comprise nearly 80% of all animals on Earth. Get close to live beetles, scorpions, and centipedes; listen to the sounds of insects communicating; experiment with robots that mimic bugs; and meet the Harvard scientists who collect and study these amazing creatures. Free with museum admission. Insect Planet is supported in part by the Cambridge Trust Company. Call 617-495-3045 for more information, or log on to www.hmnh.harvard.edu.  Image below from www.spiderzrule.com.

  • Saturday, September 19 – Stewardship Saturday on Lovells Island

    Join the Boston Harbor Islands staff on Saturday, September 19 for some hands-on learning as they remove invasive plants from important natural and historic areas of the Park.  Explore the local flora and fauna and discuss the ecology and natural history of the Park as you work side by side with expert staff to improve habitat for the native birds, bugs and flowers of our local National Park. For this journey to Lovells Island you will search for possible Swallow Wort and Japanese Knotweed.  You will also cut back some multiflora roses bushes that have grown on the outlying areas of a recently planted forest.  For more information, and for time and place of departure, call 617-223-8666 during business hours – you will get a call back.  Their web site is in a redesign process so email contact is currently down.

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