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"My chief objective in working with obscure organisms is to foster a deep appreciation for the masterful design found everywhere in the natural world.
This passion began for me with insects. Though an avid naturalist from my youth, for most of my life, insects were to be all that was wrong with nature. I could not find beauty or appreciation in them - only abhorrence. However, once I look at them from the perspective of a designer, I was immediately affected by how cleanly and precisely they fit my own artistic standards of purpose and sleek utilization. Delving a bit deeper into the insect world, I was shocked to discover how much latent elegance and lustrous beauty I had been unable to see before. As my intense emotions regarding insects switched polarity. a driving passion was born to share my newfound perspective. In order to bring others to others to this alternate view, I needed to take these enigmatic creatures as far as possible out of their natural context, where I had studiously avoided them for so many years.
I undertake this by prepping the insects in the most cleanly symmetrical forms possible and displaying them in a perfectly antiseptic, inorganic presentation: effectively diminishing the fear of reprisal that large bugs tend to inspire. In some cases, little else is required to form an appreciable tribute to these architectural marvels. For this reason, at times, I consider myself more of a designer than an artist. So much of nature's story is yet unheard. I hope to helo it ring more clearly."
Christopher Marley Green Cairins Birdwing in 11x14inch Black FrameNew Guinea
When the Papua New Guinea government discovered that the Queen Alexandra's Birdwing - the largest butterfly in the world - was nearing extinction due to habitat destruction, it began employing natives in the area to re-plant the birdwing's needed host-plant. Local villagers who hitherto had been forced to clear the endangered birdwing's habitat for farming or ranching to subsist, were allowed to collect all unprotected species of insects to sell commercially through a government agency. Consequently, natives were able to replace an environmentally devastating career with a benign one while bringing the world's largest butterfly back from the brink of extinction. Price
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