Barrett
Klein was five years old when he realized that he wanted to combine art
and insects as his life's work. "The greatest inspirational moment in
my life came as an abstract flurry when I was five years old: I saw a
painted lady butterfly lying dead on the driveway. I had never been
struck greatly by insects in particular, but when I found this and I
looked at the form, I felt a great, inexplicable potential in my hands.
And then I realized that I could keep, examine, and draw it, and
suddenly everything seemed possible."
Barrett
comes from an artistic family. "My parents are artists and own an art
gallery. All of us, including my twin brother Arno and my sister
Korinthia, would draw and paint all the time." "But
there was more: From that point on, I was drawn not only to the
aesthetics of the creature but also to the idea that I could better
understand its place in the world. If you're inspired by the beauty of
something, then I think you're more inclined to search for reasons why
it exists and reasons to better understand it," he said.
By
the time Barrett got to college, he was committed to both art and
entomology. "I really wanted to do everything: to study fine arts,
sculpture, filmmaking, biology, and even some physics if I could
squeeze it in." He majored in entomology but took as many art courses
as he could. In addition to his work as a display maker at the American
Museum of Natural History, Barrett is a working entomologist and
filmmaker.
"When
I saw that butterfly in the driveway, I knew that my life would always
involve insects and art. Everything I do ends up being insect-related:
All my films are on insect subjects." He told us about a film he made
in Panama that explored the structure and behavior of plants and plant
mimics. "I filmed leaf-cutter ants carting away pieces of leaves and
then spliced those images with ones of army ants carting away pieces of
katydids, which are mimics of leaves. It was a lot of fun," he said
with a laugh.
Barrett
says he chose to combine science and art because "I think that's the
most effective way of inspiring people to appreciate everything around
us. If you can appreciate the form of a blade of grass not only for the
beautiful streak of green and the texture but also for its ability to
produce oxygen or its function as food to countless organisms, from
spittlebugs to leaf hoppers, and if you can communicate that to others,
then you can motivate others to value everything on the planet,"
Barrett said.
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