Friday, June 18, 2010

a Dubuffet?





High on my "to-do" list was getting a photo of an ermine moth—specifically the Ailanthus webworm—because the boldly patterned, black, white and orange insects remind me of one of my favorite artists, French painter and sculptor Jean Dubuffet. Although I do not remember the color orange as being part of Dubuffet's pallette.

As the names suggests, the moths are generally found on their host plant ailanthus, an introduced tree also known as "Tree of Heaven." The webworm moths are native to the tropics and south Florida but have expanded their range north as the alien trees became widespread.

Nature is in a constant state of flux. Give and take. Yin and Yang.

Although linked to the ailanthus, this week I located several of the short (slightly less than an inch in length) moths on common milkweed at Ijams Nature Center.












Outdoor sculpture
Monument with
Standing Beast

by Jean Dubuffet
located in Chicago.






2 comments:

JoLynne Lyon said...

That bug is so fascinating it doesn't even trigger my squeamish factor.

Stephen Lyn Bales said...

Yes. JL.

They are really rather beautiful and very small.