Outside label: “AN ANIMAL CELL” “A PINE TREE”
LAURA JASPER-STUMP, OFFICE MANAGER AT SARETT NATURE CENTER
ABOUT ME: I’m a former high school science teacher turned office manager for Sarett Nature Center. I live in Saint Joseph with my husband and cats. I enjoy gardening, birdwatching, playing the piano and cello, and Netflix.
THIS IS WHAT I SEE: My first thought was that it was an interpretation of an animal cell. The colorful part sticks out to me as fur. Then when I look to the right it looks like a cell with organelles (organelles help make a cell function similar to the way our organs help our body to function). Finally, the dotted area around the piece looks like a plasma membrane.
JULIET GOLOB, NATURALIST AT SARETT NATURE CENTER
ABOUT ME: I grew up in Stevensville and I have worked at Sarett since High School. I have a love for the arts that takes the form of musical theater and various mediums of hyper realistic nature/game graphics etc. including pencil, acrylics, watercolor, and digital. I spend my spare time doing small mammal wildlife rehabilitation and loving my two pets, my kitten Marnie and my rabbit Bowser.
THIS IS WHAT I SEE: I picture a beautiful winter pine tree with the shadow of the night sky. The first thing I noticed was the flared edges of every colored portion. The shape of each individual color looks like the outline of individual pine fronds coming together to make one large tree. The dotted outline behind like a shadow in the snow and the circles within are reminiscent of the phases of the moon.
Inside label: Renee Robbins, Butterfly Wings
Renee Robbins actually referenced microscopic images of butterfly scales as she was painting this artwork. Did you know that butterflies have scales similar to the scales of a fish or feathers of a bird?! If you have ever touched a butterfly wing, you might have seen the scales come off on your finger.
Robbins also studied bioluminescence (when living organisms like fish or mushrooms emit light) and - just as Laura observed - cells to create this painting!