Two paper-cut butterflies pinned to the wall of the exhibition room. Above is the Adonis blue (Lysandea bellargus, dorsal view) and below is the Spanish greenish Black-tip (Euchloe bazae, ventral view).
General view of one of the exhibition walls.
The density of pinned specimens intends to create a vertical gradient. The bottom represents the past few decades and baseline abundance, while the top represents the recent decrease in their population.
A detailed view of one of the room's columns.
There are paper replicas in many different colours and sizes. They all depict emblematic or endangered species of moths (such as Graellsia isabellae) and butterflies (such as Parnassius apollo).
A first-person view of one of the exhibition's pieces: a container housing together host plants of certain species of Lepidoptera.
'En extinción. Lepidoptera', by Toya Legido, starts tomorrow at RJB-CSIC.
It features more than 4,000 paper-cut butterflies belonging to 50 species, representing their own decline ✂️🦋
Butterflies once again bridge the gap between #science 🧪 and #art 🎨!