|
Audubon poses the Wood Ibis atop a rock, just a moment away from snatching a shrimp. The subject frames a flock energetically feeding from distant rocks and set below the langurous Spanish moss-draped woodland. Audubon wrote, "In the spring months, when these birds collect in large flocks, before they return to their breeding places, I have seen thousands together, passing over the woods in a line more than a mile in extent." John Bachman advised Audubon that their breeding place was just twenty-five miles from Charleston. Framing your Audubons
About John James Audubon
The 435 paintings in Audubon's Birds of America constitute the most important achievement of ornithological art. Audubon combined artistic and scientific talent to produce images that are as beautiful as they are important for their recording of carefully observed ornithological detail. His unprecedented use of richly rendered natural environmental detail created striking contexts for his gracefully composed birds — all of which are presented in actual life size. Each image has the feel of a snapshot that captures a living moment. Audubon's passion for ornithological discovery and observation led him to explore large swaths of 1820s and 1830s America, especially throughout the South and the Ohio River valley. In 1826 he brought his enormous folio of large-scale paintings to London where, from 1827 — 1838, they were engraved by Robert Havell & Son and hand-colored in an edition of approximately 200. King George IV of England, King Charles I of France, Daniel Webster and many important museums and institutions of higher learning were among the subscribers to this original publication. Each Perfect Recreation™ is made from an exceptionally well-preserved Havell aquatint with rich, original hand color. If you'd like to know a lot more about Audubon, there are two wonderful biographies available at Amazon.com: Click here to buy John James Audubon: The Making of an American Click here to buy Under a Wild Sky: Making of The Birds of America
|