Metamorphosis
24.1 x 20.3 x 15.2 cm (h x w x d)
porcelain clay, Resin, Marble, COPPER WIRE, glass (eyes), ACRYLIC PAINT.

I initially created this small hybrid creature – part human, part Monarch butterfly – earlier this year, in response to a charitable initiative to repair the roof of a local Presbyterian Church in Bloomfield, NJ. After a member of the church ministry approached me for a donation of salable work on the theme of Angels, I began thinking about angels themselves, and their role as intercessors and traveler between realms. Not totally of heaven or of earth, I created this hybrid and rather vulnerable being made of gold, its body modeled after Rodin, and its wings, eyes, and proboscis based on the extensive research material I have accumulated on the Monarch Butterfly. Angels act as our protectors, but who protects them? I have long created hybrids of human and animal species, and was grateful for this opportunity to work on a smaller scale than usual, and enjoyed looking to the work of Renaissance goldsmiths in my choice of coloring and composition.
For the last 10 years I have been making work related to saving the Monarch butterfly population, whose migratory patterns I have studied closely ever since I attended the Bio Art and Science Laboratory institute at SVA. Butterflies (which travel overhead by the thousands every year) are a key link in pollination and crop health. Without them, our food supply, and our very health, would suffer. We—as humans—must, in effect, become their guardian angels if they are to go on protecting us.
“Metamorphosis” crouches on a cold marble base; its body is hermaphroditic (part male, part female), its eyes are glass, and its proboscis is copper wire. The wing patterning is based on actual wings I have observed under powerful TKNAME microscopy while at SVA. The title references Kafka, because his monstrous-and-fully-compassion-worthy character, Gregor Samsa, has long sustained me in the creation of numerous other chimeric hybrids I have created over the years—monkey-human newborns, chicken human toddlers, and giraffe-human young women, to name a few.

Other works by Jamie Levine

Frilled Sea Anemone, North Atlantic (Metridium senile), III (Series of 8) 2014 , 2014
50 x 25 in (h x w)
Archival Ink Jet print on 100% Rag Paper. Taken with a Canon 5D Mark III camera mounted on a Zeiss Stemi 2000 dissecting microscope at approximately 4X magnification.
Hostetter Arts Center Gallery
USD
Frilled Sea Anemone, North Atlantic (Metridium senile), II (Series of 8) 2014 , 2014
50 x 25 in (h x w)
Archival Ink Jet print on 100% Rag Paper. Taken with a Canon 5D Mark III camera mounted on a Zeiss Stemi 2000 dissecting microscope at approximately 4X magnification.
Hostetter Arts Center Gallery
USD
Frilled Sea Anemone, North Atlantic (Metridium senile), I (Series of 8) 2014 , 2014
50 x 25 in (h x w)
Archival Ink Jet print on 100% Rag Paper. Taken with a Canon 5D Mark III camera mounted on a Zeiss Stemi 2000 dissecting microscope at approximately 4X magnification.
Hostetter Arts Center Gallery
USD
2020 Free Fall , 2020
60 x 24 in (h x w)
Giclée print on fine 100 rag paper.
Hostetter Arts Center Gallery
The Spots That Don't Get Out , 2019
40 x 16 in (h x w)
Archival photographic print
Hostetter Arts Center Gallery

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