Bee Cell Story

Inside The Bee Cell

The Story of the Bee Cell

In 2012, we witnessed a wild beehive on the Santa Barbara Riviera in California and immediately knew we would design a video environment based on it. The hive itself was remarkable; five feet long and as thick as a human, it hung high amongst oaks, completely exposed to the elements. During the summer months, the outside was coated with bees, providing ample opportunity to capture close-up footage of individuals against the backdrop of their extraordinary architecture. Our team produced a six-sided chamber on which macro-bees were projected. Visitors coming in through one of two doors essentially entered a hive at bee scale.  This piece, “The Bee Cell”, formed the center of the “Swarm” exhibition at Ganna-Walska Lotusland in Montecito California, and received critical acclaim. Afterwards, The Bee Cell moved to the Cartwright Insect Gallery at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.

Returning to the hive earlier this year, we discovered that the decade-old colony had died. The magnificent structure was as quiet as a graveyard and with a drying pile of dead bees littering the ground. The hive was removed and brought to the museum. The Santa Barbara Beekeepers Association took core samples and sent them to a lab for analysis to discover what caused the death of the colony. The results remain inconclusive.

The bees that once thrived within the now-vacant hive remain vibrant in The Bee Cell. This juxtaposition serves as a poignant reminder of the ecological fragility facing bees and informs our mission to provide powerful experiences to people about our collective relationship with the natural world.

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