Showing posts with label wildlife art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildlife art. Show all posts

Friday, December 7, 2018

William D. Berry: Wildlife Drawings

William D. Berry



William D. Berry



William D. Berry



William D. Berry



William D. Berry



William D. Berry


The late William D. Berry was an exceptional wildlife draftsman. He lived and worked in Fairbanks, Alaska. We are fortunate to have an original Berry drawing of a moose in Stately Mangus Manor.





Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Gordon Pembridge: Hand-Turned and Hand-Carved Wooden Bowls

 Gordon Pembridge



 Gordon Pembridge



 Gordon Pembridge



 Gordon Pembridge



 Gordon Pembridge



 Gordon Pembridge



 Gordon Pembridge



 Gordon Pembridge




Hand-turned and meticulously carved wooden bowls by Gordon Pembridge...

Born in beautiful Kenya and now based in picturesque New Zealand, artist Gordon Pembridge has been lucky enough to have a lifelong relationship with nature. As a painter and woodworker, Pembridge often looks to his surroundings for inspiration, which has culminated in an oeuvre that incorporates elements of natural history and portrayals of local wildlife. A prime example of such work is Pembridge’s striking series of hand-painted, carved wooden vessels.

Each work of art is created through a woodturning process -- a sculpting technique that employs a lathe to shape the timber. Once Pembridge has achieved his desired shape, he meticulously hand-carves the wood into ornate, fern-like patterns, which he then paints and decorates with foliage, animals, and other natural motifs inspired by his two homes -- Kenya and New Zealand. Brightly colored and featuring elegantly intricate incisions, it is hard to believe the sculptures are crafted entirely out of wood.

In addition to woodturning and painting, Pembridge also dabbles in a myriad of other forms of art, including photography, graphic design, illustration, and engraving. Though his mediums may vary, his love of natural history remains a consistent muse throughout his work.






Saturday, May 14, 2016

Edwin W. Deming

Edwin W. Deming



Edwin W. Deming



Edwin W. Deming


When he was still an infant, Edwin Willard Deming's family moved from his birthplace in Ashland, Ohio, to western Illinois, an area that during those pre-and post-Civil War years retained a frontier character, and where roaming Winnebago Native Americans were sometimes neighbors. While still in his teens, Deming traveled to Indian territory in Oklahoma and sketched extensively. 

Determined to become a painter of Native Americans, he enrolled at the Art Students League, then spent a year at the Académie Julian in Paris (1884-85), studying under Gustave Boulanger and Jules Lefebvre. Back in the United States, he worked the next two years painting cycloramas

In 1887 Deming first visited and painted the Apaches and Pueblos of the Southwest. His active career of painting and illustrating took him repeatedly to the lands of the Blackfoot, Crow, and Sioux, as well as to Arizona and New Mexico. 

After the turn of the century, Deming devoted more time to sculpture but also began work on a series of romantic murals of Native American life, which were subsequently installed in the American Museum of Natural History and the Museum of the American Indian in New York.



Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Carl Rungius: Master Wildlife Painter

Carl Rungius



Carl Rungius




Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius



Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius



Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius



Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius


Carl Rungius



During his lifetime, artist Carl Rungius (1869-1959) enjoyed a reputation similar to that of well-known western painter Frederic Remington. Though interest in his depictions of the wildlife and awesome landscapes of the West declined after his death, growing fascination with our wilderness heritage is bringing Rungius back into the public eye. Rungius focused on realism in his depiction of wildlife -- he did some commercial illustration work for the magazine Field and Stream and paintings for the New York Zoological Society -- but he also experimented with expressive brushwork. Though his training was European, Rungius worked to develop a palette that would better convey the striking contrasts of light and color unique to the mountains and prairies of North America. Rungius has had several contemporary traveling exhibits created by the Glenbow Museum of Calgary, Alberta.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Variations on a Theme

A good idea is a terrible thing to waste -- the polar bear encounters strange new Arctic explorers painting meme.


Magnus Colcord "Rusty" Heurlin



Fred Machetanz



Carl Rungius


Marvin Mangus






Fred Machetanz: "Defender of the Pack"

Fred Machetanz


Fred Machetanz


Fred Machetanz


Fred Machetanz



Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Vintage "Deneki" Book Review, October 9, 1965

This vintage book review was tucked in the pages of a Deneki book that I bought online. A very nice bonus.

William D. Berry

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Fred Machetanz: "A Puppy Named Gih"

Fred Machetanz


Fred Machetanz


Fred Machetanz



Fred Machetanz

This is the story of training a team of sled dog puppies in Alaska, including a puppy named "Gih" which is the Eskimo word for "Go." It was first published in 1957, and was written by Sara Machetanz and illustrated by Fred Machetanz.