Lord of the Flies: How This Artist Enlists an Army of Tiny Collaborators
Most people consider flies vermin, pests they are loath to see in the house. For Los Angeles artist John Knuth (b. 1978), they’ve become collaborators—and no fewer than one million of them helped create the paintings for his current show, “Hot Garden,” at New York’s Hollis Taggart Downtown.
It was a dirty windowsill that first inspired Knuth to start thinking about flies in the context of art, way back in 2005. Flies digest their food through regurgitation, leaving behind tiny specks wherever they land—markings that you may have overlooked in your own home, but that fortuitously captured Knuth’s eye.
“I realized that each of those flyspecks is a painting. That’s a deposit of a pigment on a surface,” he told me.
Inspired by the artistic potential of these humble creatures, Knuth set out to explore it, embarking on a creative journey that would change the course of his career—and forge a veritable army of tiny assistants.
John Knuth, Red Sky in the Morning (2025). Photo: Evan Walsh, courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
How Do Flies Make Art?
Visitors to the exhibition were able to see Knuth’s process with the flies for themselves. Inside a custom-built enclosure in the gallery, there were hundreds of thousands of insects on hand for the opening, buzzing and busily working their magic on a suite of small sculptures.
“It was such a great night,” gallery partner Paul Efstathiou told me. “People were freaking out.”
“They added so much energy to the show,” Knuth agreed. “There’s a real awe moment to it, seeing that many flies in one place.”
Flies finishing the “sculpture garden” in “John Knuth: Hot Garden” at Hollis Taggart Downtown. Photo: courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
The flies, whose lifespan is just a few weeks, eventually died out—Knuth had to go back to L.A., and Efstathiou was not up to raising a new generation from maggots on his own—but the art they left behind speaks to Knuth’s unique process.
Knuth orders fly larvae by the thousand, letting them hatch in environments strategically stocked with canvases. (He spent thousands of dollars on the flies for this show; the finished works are priced between $700 and $20,000.)
John Knuth, Hot Garden (2025). Photo: Evan Walsh, courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
Knuth has returned to this kind of work periodically over the past 20 years—especially after the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art approached him in 2013 about doing a video on the fly paintings for its still-nascent YouTube channel. It got over 100,000 views, a big viral moment by the standards of the day, and one that led to multiple gallery shows and even landed Knuth a mention in a book, Super Fly: The Unexpected Lives of the World’s Most Successful Insects.
“I can say that moment in 2013 is what really made my career happen,” Knuth said. “The fly paintings literally helped me buy my house.”
John Knuth with his flies, working on two paintings. Photo: Ian Byers-Gamber.
Art Responding to Personal Tragedy—and Climate Crisis
Now, those same paintings are helping Knuth; his wife, interior designer Taylor Jacobson; and their five-and-a-half-year-old son, Mateo, as they look to move forward in the months following the Eaton Fire. The family was among the thousands of people in Altadena, many of them artists, who lost their homes in the blaze.
“The hard part was losing my entire history and losing my entire archive,” Knuth said. “Every artist has this dream that one day the Hammer or whatever will do our retrospective, right? So it was crushing, losing 25 years of work.”
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The paintings and sculptures in “Hot Garden” are the first that he’s made in the aftermath of the disaster, a kind of literal rebirth for the artist in the wake of a climate change-fueled disaster.
A particularly hopeful moment comes in a work that incorporates a painting by Knuth’s son, who has grown up making art side by side with his dad. Titled Mateo Knuth, the best painter in the family, the work is a sweet tribute to their relationship, melding childhood innocence and the beauty of nature.
John Knuth, Mateo Knuth, the best painter in the family (2025). Photo: Evan Walsh, courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
The “sculpture garden” that the flies helped paint on site at the gallery includes fragments pulled from the ashes of Knuth’s home from his collection of work by other artists. His friend, Chet Glaze, even contributed a new work, a small wooden pyramid clad in sheets of copper. And then Knuth also fabricated miniature versions of famous pieces in nearby museums that were threatened by the fires, including The Thinker by Auguste Rodin and Little Dancer by Edgar Degas.
“The Getty Villa was on the edge of burning. The fires reached two miles from the Norton Simon. None of those spaces are safe,” Knuth said. “We think of museums as being forever. And these fires taught me that nothing is forever.”
John Knuth, Edgar Degas, The Fourteen Year Old Dancer (2025). Photo: Evan Walsh, courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
Another piece in the show is a fly painting executed on a copy of the New York Times article interviewing Altadena artists about the destruction of their homes in the fire. The headline quotes Knuth—“This Is Our Pompeii”—but the text is partially obscured by a plethora of tiny red and blue flyspecks. (It’s one of two works in the show that have been purchased by the Getty Museum in Los Angeles.)
A large diptych, titled January 7, also alludes to the date of the fire, and is inspired by the ominous clouds of smoke in the sky as Altadena went up in flames. The artist thinks of these paintings as “distorted landscapes.”
John Knuth, This is our Pompeii (2025). Photo: Evan Walsh, courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
The Surprising Beauty of Fly Vomit
Harnessing the power of flies in the name of art took some trial and error. For one thing, it’s almost inevitable that the flies escape from Knuth’s makeshift painting studios.
The artist has lost deposits on studio spaces due to infestations, and his wife isn’t all too keen on the process either. “It drives her crazy,” he said. (Thankfully, Knuth has developed a more effective enclosure system, keeping the fly colonies inside a large camping tent while they work.)
John Knuth’s fly painting set up. Photo: courtesy of the artist.
But even more important than controlling the environment was perfecting the paintings themselves.
“The first paintings I made with the flies, they’re all brown. I was feeding them Taco Bell and McDonald’s,” Knuth said. “After a while I realized, those are cool conceptual art pieces, but they’re not great paintings. They’re intriguing objects, but they don’t entice your eye.”
“John Knuth: Hot Garden” at Hollis Taggart Downtown. Photo: courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
So Knuth began feeding his flies acrylic paint mixed with sugar water. The results were far more vibrant and visually interesting. (And, he’s pretty sure, still won’t get him into trouble with PETA, as his flies are living normal lifespans and remain sexually active.)
“I’ve really pushed the fly works to this point of being transcendent, beautiful paintings,” Knuth said of the resulting works, which he considers a kind of abstract pointillism.
John Knuth, Untitled (2025). Photo: Evan Walsh, courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
Each piece is a true collaboration, an underpainting made by Knuth complemented by a flyspeck overlay, sometimes made by several generations in varying colors, the density of marks radiating out from the carefully placed food sources.
“All the compositions are very planned out,
very intentional,” Knuth said. “There are some unknowns in terms of how the flies are going to react, but I do a lot of sketches and preparatory paintings to create each of the paintings. So they’re not just random.”
John Knuth, The Spark (2025). Photo: Evan Walsh, courtesy of Hollis Taggart Downtown, New York.
His dream would be to turn the entirety of the spiraling, white-walled rotunda of New York’s Guggenheim Museum into one giant fly painting—created in front of visitors, with museum-goers walking through swarms of flies making their mark on the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed landmark.
“I live with the flies,” Knuth said. “I’d like other people to have that experience.”
“John Knuth: The Hot Garden” is on view at Hollis Taggart Downtown, 109 Norfolk Street, New York, New York, through August 16, 2025. More