Insect Apocalypse

Lee Lee: Aerial view of the DOW chemical plant in Texas
Silkscreen, sharpie, colored pencil, gouache & oxidized copper on paper
Aerial view of the DOW chemical plant in Texas
Silkscreen, sharpie, colored pencil, gouache & oxidized copper on paper

One of the most dangerous unspoken threats we are facing is the insect-apocalypse currently underway. As the foundation of ecological webs as well as an essential part of our food production, the disappearance of pollinators presents a grave situation, yet few speak of it. While creating studies of pollinators native to Maine, I sometimes feel inclined to cut them out to collage on various backgrounds. With the voids, I build collages that integrate reproductions of the DOW Chemical Plant landscape that I painted in 2009. Filling the voids of these bumble bee forms with the saturated textures of the original landscape speaks to the impacts of chemicals that fill our spheres. Even the word ‘pesticide’ reduces our perception of value by blanketing judgement across the whole insect world without recognition of the role that beneficial insects play in a balanced approach to agriculture.

Lee Lee - Mixed media work on paper about the chemical impacts on pollinators - the Insect Apocalypse - work in progress
Lee Lee - Mixed media work on paper about the chemical impacts on pollinators - the Insect Apocalypse - Honeybee
Lee Lee - Mixed media work on paper about the chemical impacts on pollinators - the Insect Apocalypse - Bombus
Lee Lee - Mixed media work on paper about the chemical impacts on pollinators - the Insect Apocalypse - Bombus
Lee Lee - Mixed media work on paper about the chemical impacts on pollinators - the Insect Apocalypse