Skip directly to site content Skip directly to page options Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link
Volume 20, Number 12—December 2014
About the Cover

Variation Is the Exploration of Possibilities

Article Metrics
Author affiliation: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Cite This Article

Fred Tomaselli (b. 1956) Starling. 2010. Photo collage, acrylic, and resin on wood panel. 80 × 80 in/203.2 × 203.2 cm. © The Artist. Courtesy James Cohan Gallery, New York/Shanghai
Fred Tomaselli (b. 1956) Starling. 2010. Photo collage, acrylic, and resin on wood panel. 80 × 80 in/203.2 × 203.2 cm. © The Artist. Courtesy James Cohan Gallery, New York/Shanghai

Born in 1956, American artist Fred Tomaselli grew up in Orange, California, and in 1982, he graduated from California State University, Fullerton, with a degree in painting and drawing. In the early 1980s, Tomaselli became established in the “Downtown L.A.” art, music, and drug countercultures. Since 1985, he has lived and worked in Brooklyn, New York.

He is best known for his visually stunning hybrid creations—part painting and part mosaic—and for his series of collages based on front-page articles from The New York Times. His works have been exhibited widely throughout the world and are in collections at many prominent museums.

Tomaselli collects and incorporates unusual materials into his works, including pharmaceutical and street drugs and myriad images of plants, birds, and body parts cut from catalogs and magazines, suspending them in layers of clear epoxy resin. If bugs, leaves, and other debris become trapped in the sticky resin, Tomaselli keeps them. He acknowledges the influence of Eastern and Western decorative traditions such as quilts, tapestries, and mosaics, art forms that feature details and repetition. Tomaselli considers his approach to art as a way of reorganizing and reframing information. He once explained to an interviewer, “When I combine these little chunks of information, it’s not unlike the way nature stacks up genes to build everything from viruses to humans. I tend to see each small bit like an individual cell, a piece of binary code, or a strand of DNA that accumulates, accrues, and grows into my images.”

Tomaselli wants viewers to lose themselves in his art, even to the point of experiencing the sort of confusion and exaltation attributed to Stendhal syndrome. He describes his art as being “about artificial immersive environments, about escapism,” themes spawned by his upbringing in suburban California, where amusement parks, shopping malls, and recreational drugs were pervasive.

The artist created this month’s dazzling cover image, Starling, for an exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum. The starling’s head juts from the bottom left amidst searing fluid-like ribbons of red, blue, and yellow. Various insects, perhaps food the bird has eaten, comprise its neck and stomach. This stylized starling may be launching into one of its species’ complex soliloquies or devouring figs from the trees growing in the artist’s yard. Radiant, precise pulsing kaleidoscopic patterns float across the top third of the painting. The bird’s head provides a reference point, but exploring the array of swirling colors, exploding shapes, dots, and specks proves irresistible. The juxtaposition of colorful microscopic and celestial images contrasted against a black background recurs in much of Tomaselli’s art.

Starlings were first introduced into the United States in 1890 when Eugene Schieffelin released 60 of them in New York City’s Central Park, not far from the Brooklyn Museum that now houses Tomaselli’s Starling. Schieffelin, who belonged to the American Acclimatization Society, wanted to introduce each species of bird mentioned in the Shakespeare’s works into the United States. (Shakespeare mentioned a starling in Henry IV, Part 1, Act 1, Scene 3, wherein Hotspur seeks revenge on King Henry, who refuses to pay the ransom for Hotspur’s brother-in-law Mortimer: “Nay / I’ll have a starling shall be taught to speak / Nothing but ‘Mortimer,’ and give him/ To keep his anger still in motion.”)

An estimated 200 million of these iridescent interlopers, recognized by their purple and green chests and throats and their rasping, screeching songs, are entrenched across the United States (invasive starlings are also found in Canada, South Africa, New Zealand, and Australia). A New York Times article written a century after their importation notes that the starling “has distinguished itself as one of the costliest and most noxious birds on our continent.” Starlings roost in massive colonies, displace native species of birds, pose problems for air travel, damage crops and fruit trees, and help spread diseases, offsetting any benefits they add by eating insects.

Starlings and other bird species could potentially harbor harmful agents, including those that cause influenza, histoplasmosis, cryptococcosis, and West Nile encephalitis in humans. When present in massive numbers or under the right circumstances, such wild bird populations may be more than a nuisance and possibly pose health threats. Some pathogens hosted by bird species are capable of reorganizing and reframing their genetic information. In his recently published book Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic, David Quammen used the phrase “variation is the exploration of possibilities” when discussing mutations in viruses—which also sounds like Tomaselli’s approach to creating his multifaceted collages.

Top

Acknowledgment

I thank Louise E. Shaw for making me aware of the artwork of Fred Tomaselli and for helping obtain permission to use Starling.

Top

Bibliography

  1. Ayers  R. A conversation with artist Fred Tomaselli [cited 2014 Sept 15] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-ayers/i-think-its-hilarious-rob_b_786621.html
  2. Boon  ACM, Sandbulte  MR, Seiler  P, Webby  RJ, Songserm  T, Guan  Y, Role of terrestrial wild birds in ecology of influenza A virus (H5N1). Emerg Infect Dis. 2007;13:17204 http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/13/11/07-0114. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  3. Gaukler  SM, Linz  GM, Sherwood  JS, Dyer  NW, Bleier  WJ, Wannemuehler  YM, Escherichia coli, Salmonella, and Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis in wild European starlings at a Kansas cattle feedlot. Avian Dis. 2009;53:54451 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  4. Lescaze  Z. Fred Tomaselli is off drugs [cited 2014 Sept 15]. http://observer.com/2014/05/fred-tomaselli-is-off-drugs/
  5. Linz  G, Homan  H, Gaukler  S, Penry  L, Bleier  W. European starlings: a review of an invasive species with far-reaching impacts. Managing vertebrate invasive species. Proceedings of an international symposium; Fort Collins, Colorado; 2007 Aug 7–9 [cited 2014 Sept 16]. http://www.aphis.usda.gov/wildlife_damage/nwrc/symposia/invasive_symposium/nwrc_TOC_index.shtml
  6. Mirsky  S. Shakespeare to blame for introduction of European starlings to U.S. [cited 2014 Sept 16]. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/call-of-the-reviled/?page=1
  7. Quammen  D. Spillover: animal infections and the next human pandemic. New York: W.W. Norton & Company; 2013.
  8. Shields  F. Artists in conversation: Fred Tomaselli [cited 2014 Sept 23]. http://bombmagazine.org/article/3625/

Top

Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid2012.ac2012

Related Links

Top

Table of Contents – Volume 20, Number 12—December 2014

EID Search Options
presentation_01 Advanced Article Search – Search articles by author and/or keyword.
presentation_01 Articles by Country Search – Search articles by the topic country.
presentation_01 Article Type Search – Search articles by article type and issue.

Top

Comments

Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:

Byron Breedlove, EID Journal, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd NE, Mailstop E41, Atlanta, GA 30329-4027, USA

Send To

10000 character(s) remaining.

Top

Page created: May 05, 2015
Page updated: May 05, 2015
Page reviewed: May 05, 2015
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
file_external