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Butterflies
may get more press, but to Joseph Scheer, nothing is more
beautiful than the misunderstood moth. By his own admission,
he is obsessed with the moth and with the release of his book
Night VisionsThe Secret Designs of Moths, Scheer hopes
to elevate
the status of this underrated insect. Scheer comes from a
printmaking background, but like many contemporary artists,
he has worked across many mediums:drawing, painting, and photographic
processes, among others. He is not a scientist and had no
formal training in biology or environmental science prior
to his work with moths. But to hear him talk excitedly about
the myriad species he has documented since 1998, youd
think thathe has been studying the moth for decades.cheer
completed his graduatework in art at the University of New
Mexico and joined the faculty of Alfred University in 1989.
The next ten years was a time of rapid changefor the art world
as the burgeoning technology of the era (Photoshop, publishing
tools, etc.) became readily available. In response, Scheer
and two of his colleagues founded the Institute for Electronic
Arts in 1997 to expose students and faculty to opportunities
in art and technology and to solicit grants from industry
to fund the purchase of hardware and equipment. Scheer could
never have imagined that the technology he was promoting would
lead him to an in-depth study of this primal creature.
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Photo
Insider (PI): How were you introduced to the process of scanning
these moths?
Joseph
Scheer (JS): Well, I actually started with a gnat! [laughs.]
One of the first pieces of hardware received by the institute
was ahigh-resolution scanner with an Iris printer. Once the
scanne r
was set up, it needed to be tested for the first time. There
was a tiny gnat flying around the room. So I grabbed the gnat
and threw it on the scanner and thought, Lets see what
this thing can really do. When the image came up, it was amazing.
I was completely blown away.
PI: What struck you? Was the detail of the insects
anatomy clear?
JS: The compound eyes, the hair all over its body, and the
metallic wings just took me by surprise, and suddenly a whole
new world opened up. Here were all these things around me
every day. I wondered what else was out there.
We printed
the image out on the Iris, and it was stunning. The access
I had to these powerful tools and the curiosity about what
other insects might look like...
PI:
made you want to play with this new toy!
JS: I came up with the idea that if I worked all summer long,
perhaps I could collect 200 different species of insects and
create a series called Things That Fly or something
like that. I had just a basic idea when I started out.
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PI:
How did you go about finding these insects and actually catching
them?
JS: I got a pile of insect collecting books and did some reading
to see what I could find in the area. I got some butterfly
nets and ran aroundlooking at all the buzzing things flying
by. Things were everywhere! I started to pay attention to
the bees and wasps and beetles and dragonflies and the tons
of things that are out there. I didnt really know what
I was doing, so I collected everything. I thought I was going
to be lucky to get 200 species over the course of the summer,
but as it turned out, at the end of two weeks I had over 500.
The insect world was so much bigger and diverse than I thought.
PI: How did you know what you caught, and what did you
do with all the specimens?
JS: A lot I never identified. It was getting crazy. There
was such a hodgepodge that I started to just categorize them
by color or size. But as I was going through them, the insects
that intrigued me the most were the moths.
PI: And just to clarify, you had never had any experience
with moths prior to this project?
JS: Moths would always fly into the art building during the
summer and land on the windowsills. I would pick them up and
keep them in a dish on my desk. Every year, Id add more
moths to it. I was fascinated by how colorful and large some
of them were. I had tried in the past to do something with
them with a low-res scanner, but it never came our
right. I didnt become obsessed until the technology
caught up with what I was tinkering with. [laughs.]
PI: Dont get me wrong, but did your students think
it was weird that you had this pile of moths on your desk
at school?
JS: At art school? No way. People collect strange things all
the time there. This would really be something pretty common.
Theres a lot of weirder stuff going on there
[laughs.]
PI: Okay, the big question, out of all the different kinds
of insects out there, why moths?
JS: As an artist, I was attracted to moths not only because
they are amazing and beautiful, but because there is loaded
imagery and symbolism in moths. Theyre creatures of
the night as opposed to the butterfly, which are creatures
of the day. People are more afraid of moths. They dismiss
them as small, ugly gray/brown things that mess up your food
and
eat your clothes. And of course the idea that they are attracted
to light, to the flame, is a powerful metaphor. Think of what
exists at night: the night culture, the club scene, the ecstasy
scene, the punk scenethats not part of mainstream
culture. We would rather gloss over that part of society,
pretend its not there. For me, the moth is the symbol of all
that. Something that is quite beautiful, that only comes out
at night, thats short-lived and has this intensity and
then its gone.
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PI:
Once you made the decision to focus specifically on moths,
did your methodology change? I assume it was more focused.

JS: I limited myself to the species of moths that existed
on this one
place on the planet, near the university. Then it became a
real
obsession. I would go out every single night to find new moths
and
spend the day scanning. Literally, there were thousands and
thousands of moths to choose from. Among those, I found close
to 1,200 species.
PI:
Wow. Just there in upstate New York?
JS: Yes. Over the years Ive been doing this, Ive
learned about how the
environment affects what types of species will show up any
given summer. I began to see that just up here in New York
State, if the weather is different one year, youll see
moths that youve never seen before. Full moons, the
time of the month, the types of plants around,
all these factors determine which moths show up. Theres
a complexity to their patterns that I have been learning slowly
over the course of the project.
PI: When you first started the project, what were your
motivations
beyond how interesting a moth looks once it was scanned?
JS: Seeing the quality of the images that the technology could
create was so compelling. And there was this obsession with
wanting to see all these moths. If theyre here in this
world that I live in every day, why dont I know about
them? People think that these moths are from
some exotic place, from South America, because theyve
never seen a moth that looks like that. But these moths are
around all the time and in such quantities! They get no attention.
I felt like I had to do it.
PI: You felt almost as if you were opening a whole world
to people.
JS: And opening a world for myself. I was missing a big part
of the world and what exists here. It makes you think about
the biodiversity thats on the planet and how fragile
it is. I needed to know what was living in my backyard.
PI: This must have changed the way you look at many other
things. If there are this many different species of moths,
then how many different species of mosquitoes are out there?
Or dragonflies?
JS: If I had all the money and time in the world, I would
document the whole spectrum of biodiversity that exists here
in my area and scan the results as a database for people to
study. Ive met a lot of scientists that study moths,
and they are so pleased with these images. Many say Im
opening up their world to the public. It brings attention
to their
work in a way thats presented artistically. The book
is truly a celebration of moths. Im very excited for
people to see what Ive seen.They feel that my images
help broaden the appreciation and recognition of the preciousness
of children, and our responsibility to care for them.
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