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Bluebird and Purple Coneflower |
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Bluebird and Purple
Coneflower
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I've been wanting to
do a bluebird piece
for a long time, but I was only recently able to finally gather all the
reference material I needed to create a strong painting design.

I was raised on a farm in eastern Iowa
between the town of Swisher and the eastern-most colony of the Amana
Colonies appropriately called, East Amana. The farm included some rich Iowa
River bottom ground and nearby hills and valleys with a mosaic of timber and
pasture. The timber included a number of ancient trees including old white
oaks dating back to pre-settlement days. A creek ran through the farm. There
were lots of places to explorer and learn about mother nature and I took
full advantage of it. I've never out grown that passion, the excitement of
exploring new country and learning about the natural world.
Though I was raised on a farm I never really
wanted to be a farmer. It always seemed more interesting to me to study the
natural world. At a young age I realized I wanted to live and work on a
farm, not to make a living but to work with the habitat and wildlife. Of
course that usually doesn't pay very well so the dream stayed a dream for
many years.
So owning a piece of land in Iowa and
managing it for habitat and wildlife has been a dream of mine for most of my
life. While teaching and raising a family funds accumulated slowly so I was
almost 50 by the time I joined friends to purchase some ground in northern
Missouri. I bought my current farm, a rather run down piece of ground in
1997. It showed a lot of use. The CRP was
all brome and
the timber long neglected and choked with multiflora
rose. But it was what I was looking for. Not much of a farm for
traditional farming, but it was a great candidate for a wildlife farm.
The following 11 years have been a labor of
love. Lots of tree planting, timber stand improvement, putting in food
plots, ponds and a wetland, re-establishing native grass and prairie. The
property is managed for a lot of diversity of habitat with the goal of
appealing to a wide range of wildlife. Along with nest boxes for Canada
geese, kestrels, wood ducks, wrens, and tree swallows, we have number of
bluebird houses and the bluebirds take full advantage of them.
I was sitting in a blind near one of these
bluebird houses one morning as the rising sun cut through the morning fog.
I'd carefully placed the blind to get the angle of light I wanted and for
once everything went right. A pair of bluebirds came by house hunting. The
male looked it over from a number of different angles. Then the female did
her inspection. Meanwhile, a very excited wildlife artist (that's me) was
enjoying the whole show and capturing it through a 200 mm lens for up-close
results. That is how I captured the bluebird reference I subsequently used
to paint Bluebirds and Purple Coneflower.
Along with building bird habitats, we've been
working on re-establishing several prairie plots on the farm by seeding
dozens of species of native
grasses, forbs,
and sedges.
Much of the seed used I had collected myself during my wanderings. I also
included a bag of seed I
bought from Carl Kurtz, who is an exceptional photographer and sells native
seed raised on his farm. (We first met in the 1960s while studying Fish and
Wildlife Biology at Iowa State University.) The seed bag was composed of up
to 80 different plants, so each year I walk the prairies and see if I can
spot any new members of the community emerging.
<back |
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Giclée Canvas
18” x 12 1/8”
85 SN
$275
10 AP
$325
Giclee Paper Print
14" x 9.5"
850 SN $85
85 AP $125
Standard Signature
Decorator
(open edition prints) $25
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There are the plants that show up only after
a number of years. Then there are the old reliables that show up every year.
One that is very showy in the summer is purple
coneflower.
I like to head out at dawn each morning with my camera and take photos while
the light is prime. It was on several of these forays that I collected the
purple coneflower reference.
Though I've taken out many of the interior
fences on the property, I often leave old fence posts in place when they are
not in the way. In southeastern Iowa, most of these were cut from hedge
apple (Osage-orange)
decades ago. Hedge posts are extremely rot resistant and therefore last a
very long time. The older they get, the more character they develop. This
particular post sits along a lane which cuts through a little patch of
prairie. Though I didn't see the pair of bluebirds in that particular spot,
it seems like a natural setting for them. It also provided the reference
post for this painting.
Once I had the components I needed, I created
the conceptual design, and then finally the original painting. I had plenty
of reference material, so I experimented with various elements and
compositions until I found the arrangement I liked best. It was fun to work
the various colors up and down to find the right balance. Developing the
atmosphere of the scene enhanced the sense of depth. These paintings, even
though they may seem simple in composition at first glance, seem to always
take longer than I anticipate to finish. It's worth the work, though,
because it's final result that counts. I hope you like the result of my work
this time: Bluebirds and Purple Coneflower.
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Revised:
06/03/09 19:28:39 -0500
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