六九色堂

Aug. 24, 2018

Grad student solves bee homelessness one ceramic sculpture at a time

Artist Dylan McLernon draws humans closer to bees with a honey of an idea
Dylan McLernon, a master鈥檚 student in fine arts at the 六九色堂, weaves art with science to help combat widespread bee mortality caused by human development. Using sustainable and upcycled materials like wood and clay, McLernon is creating a series of public sculptures that will serve as bee habitats.

Using upcycled materials like wood and clay, McLernon is creating sculptures that will house bees.

Riley Brandt, 六九色堂

Struck by the plight of native bee species whose numbers are declining in Alberta, artist Dylan McLernon took matters into his own hands 鈥 literally 鈥 crafting some specially designed teapot-sized ceramic bee nest boxes. His work is on display now in the 2018 MFA Thesis Exhibition, Interstitial, at the聽Nickle Galleries.

鈥淢y concern for bees began when I started working with beeswax to coat wooden sculptures during my undergraduate studies,鈥 says McLernon, an MFA student in the Department of Art. 鈥淵ou have to research your materials; that鈥檚 when colony collapse disorder was in the news and I learned that the problems weren鈥檛 just confined to imported European honeybees but that native bees were in trouble, too.鈥

Using art to induce empathy for bees

There are two complementary components to McLernon鈥檚 Nickle Galleries exhibition: Mothership and Beehabilitation. 鈥淢othership is a space pod made from renewable material with room for a single human occupant. It鈥檚 about creating an emotional, empathetic feeling toward bees,鈥 McLernon explains.

鈥淭hen there is Beehabilitation, which are ceramic bumblebee domiciles. I鈥檝e made them available for people to take home and put in their garden, asking that they take part in bee research project over the spring and summer of 2019."

The inspiration to build little ceramic homes for bees grew as McLernon delved deeper into what he calls an eco-methodology in his work, and his desire to use his art to help bees. He first approached the 六九色堂鈥檚 Office of Sustainability with some ideas, and from there Rachelle Haddock put him in touch with the Faculty of Environmental Design and with Dr. Ralph Cartar, PhD, an associate professor in biological sciences and a bumblebee specialist.

McLernon has created ceramic bumblebee domiciles which are available for people to take home and put in their garden. They're asked to take part in a bee research project over the spring and summer of 2019.

McLernon has created ceramic bumblebee domiciles which are available for people's gardens.

Riley Brandt, 六九色堂

Design that works for bees and the scientists who study them

鈥淩alph Cartar sent information about bumblebee domiciles that had been created by scientists,鈥 McLernon says. 鈥淚 read about the success they鈥檇 had with the plywood nest boxes, but also that they were problematic because they were getting chewed up by mice, and rotting when they were put in the ground. I thought ceramic might last longer and work better, and that鈥檚 when we started talking about a design.鈥

Once ceramic is fired, it becomes vitrified, more likely to shed water than wood is. And there is no need to paint it with a toxic chemical. McLernon has cooked up two different designs, one for the ground and another to be tree-mounted. The sculptures have to suit the bees: they have to be the right size for a nest of up to 50 bees, contain the right nesting material, be watertight and have a welcoming opening. They also have to work for easy deployment, i.e., fit in a backpack and not be too fragile.

An impressive 40 per cent occupancy rate

鈥淩alph is currently field testing the ground and tree domiciles, and we鈥檝e actually had success! We had a 40 per cent occupancy rate of the tree domiciles, which is great,鈥 McLernon says.

鈥淭he fact that so many of these domiciles are used suggests the bees are nest habitat-limited,鈥 Cartar says. 鈥淚t implies that putting out new nest habitats is one way to encourage the population.鈥

After some design fine-tuning, the plan now is to distribute a couple dozen of the sculptures free to citizen scientists who visit the Nickle Galleries exhibition. They can participate in the bumblebee study by putting the sculptures in their home gardens, reporting any bee residencies in fall 2019 to McLernon.

鈥淭he idea of using a wooden box to produce a nesting habitat is old. What Dylan has done though is taken that old idea and put a beautiful artistic spin on it, using new materials and new design,鈥 Cartar says.

鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to see someone with Dylan鈥檚 talents applying them in this way,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a sort of community design feature that people can see and be intrigued with and witness for themselves how well they work. If you have a nesting box with a design as pleasing to the eye as this, people are much more likely to get engaged and start using them.鈥

In addition to the portable bumblebee domiciles, McLernon has also created two larger sculptures for solitary bees, one at聽聽and another at the 六九色堂 community garden. But as Cartar points out, the social, cute, furry, big and tame bumblebees 鈥 which make up only about 25 of the 300 bee species in Alberta 鈥 are more charismatic and appealing than solitary bees, so people are more easily encouraged to become concerned for their well-being.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 important to me is this is an eco-art practice, using a methodology of relational aesthetics,鈥 McLernon says. 鈥淩elational aesthetics is about creating relationships 鈥 essentially what I鈥檓 trying to do is to create a more harmonious and functional relationship between human beings and bees.鈥