famous “Beetle Wing Dress” worn by Victorian
actress Ellen Terry in her portrayal of Lady
Macbeth (1888–89), now preserved at her home
at Smallhythe Place, in Kent, UK. The same jewel
beetles Sternocera aequisignata (Buprestidae) were
used in large installations by Belgian artist Jan
Fabre (born 1958), including “Heaven of
Delight,” where a whole room of a Brussels
Palace, including the chandeliers, is encrusted
with thousands of elytra. Another metallic green
beetle often used in jewelry is the tortoise beetle
Polychalca punctatissima (Chrysomelidae) from
Brazil. These were popular in the 1920s and
were often sold, in the spirit of the times but quite
wrongly, as “scarabs.” Sadly, they seem much rarer
now. Many of the Atlantic coastal forests where
they used to live have been destroyed.
left | A realistic bronze
sculpture of dung beetles
with a dung ball by Wendy
Taylor delights children
and entomologists at
London Zoo.
below | Albrecht Dürer’s
famous stag beetle, one of
the earliest Renaissance
works to choose a beetle,
without allegory or
symbolism, for a subject.