As part of The Schuylkill Center’s 2019 exhibition We All Fall Down: Artists Respond to the Emerald Ash Borer, Anthony Heinz May created a site-based sculpture from a standing dead ash tree, calling attention to the relationships between humans, nature, and technology. Today, Buprestid Insulae can be found near the Fire Pond at the Schuylkill Center.
We All Fall Down: Artists Respond to the Emerald Ash Borer
A STEAM project sponsored in part by the Philadelphia Science Festival
Since the emerald ash borer arrived in the midwest United States in 2002, it has rapidly decimated many forests, resulting in the death of millions of ash trees. With a 99% kill rate, it will sweep through our area like a wave and wipe out all of Philadelphia’s ash trees in the next 5-10 years. The emerald ash borer and its distinctive D-shaped bore hole was first seen at the Schuylkill Center in Summer 2018, and with some areas of the Schuylkill Center property having as much as 50% of its canopy composed of ash trees, the ash borer will have a significant impact on our ecosystem.
Wood from impacted ash trees was made available to six artists: Nancy Agati, Laurie Beck Peterson, Anthony Heinz May, John Kuiphoff, Brian Skalaski, and Janine Wang. They created new artworks for the Schuylkill Center’s gallery and trails that educated visitors about the emerald ash borer and other threats to Philadelphia’s trees. We All Fall Down: Artists Respond to the Emerald Ash Borer harnessed this unfortunate occurrence to make the impacts of this invasive insect more visible and understandable.