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

See This Art Exhibit Before It Migrates. Borderland Birds By David Tomb.




There's only a few more days to visit this amazing art exhibit/installation at the San Francisco Electric Works gallery. The Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas, works on paper by David Tomb, featuring work inspired by Tomb’s birding trips to the borderlands of the United States and Mexico will close this Saturday, May 29th.

For this exhibition, Tomb, a celebrated painter of portraits of people, brings his rigorous attention to birds. Secondary to dealing with the subject matter of birds, Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas also highlights the impact of the US-Mexico border fence; a project environmentalists say spells disaster for the sensitive ecology of the region. Beyond simple cataloging and rendering of the splendid birds of the borderland region, Tomb's work calls to mind the plight of people who have to cross this border on a daily basis, a feat fraught with problems migrating birds do with relative ease.




Part drawing show, part installation, in the gallery Tomb recreates the sights and sounds of the borderland region by use of native vegetation and ambient sound recordings.



Viewers will be transported to two fragile and unique areas: the beautiful Sky Islands of Mexico/Southern Arizona and the Lower Rio Grande Valley that borders Mexico and Texas. While much of this habitat has been converted to corporate agriculture some remote hidden mountain canyons still harbor a rich trove of beautiful and rare creatures. Tomb’s exhibition will focus on the following species: Montezuma Quail, Aztec Thrush, Aplomado Falcon, and Coati.






Tomb combines experience in the field with research of bird specimens at the California Academy of Sciences and the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at UC Berkeley. His final masterful renderings of the birds are life size and depict the birds in their natural habitat. As an avid birder, Tomb has been lucky enough to have his nerves rattled by the freaky chorus of Chachalacas in the thorny scrub and to have glimpsed the jewel-like Elegant Trogon during July monsoons.

Here are some photos from the exhibit:






all information and images courtesy of the gallery and the artist.

Tomb received his BFA from California State University Long Beach and has shown nationally and internationally.

Plants for the installation generously provided by The Dry Garden, Oakland.

The SF Electric Works Gallery site.
For purchasing information, please contact Noah Lang via email or at 415.626.5496. Prices and availability are subject to change.


if you're not familiar with Tomb's figurative work, check out my post on that here.

the artist's own website

See This Art Exhibit Before It Migrates. Borderland Birds By David Tomb.




There's only a few more days to visit this amazing art exhibit/installation at the San Francisco Electric Works gallery. The Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas, works on paper by David Tomb, featuring work inspired by Tomb’s birding trips to the borderlands of the United States and Mexico will close this Saturday, May 29th.

For this exhibition, Tomb, a celebrated painter of portraits of people, brings his rigorous attention to birds. Secondary to dealing with the subject matter of birds, Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas also highlights the impact of the US-Mexico border fence; a project environmentalists say spells disaster for the sensitive ecology of the region. Beyond simple cataloging and rendering of the splendid birds of the borderland region, Tomb's work calls to mind the plight of people who have to cross this border on a daily basis, a feat fraught with problems migrating birds do with relative ease.




Part drawing show, part installation, in the gallery Tomb recreates the sights and sounds of the borderland region by use of native vegetation and ambient sound recordings.



Viewers will be transported to two fragile and unique areas: the beautiful Sky Islands of Mexico/Southern Arizona and the Lower Rio Grande Valley that borders Mexico and Texas. While much of this habitat has been converted to corporate agriculture some remote hidden mountain canyons still harbor a rich trove of beautiful and rare creatures. Tomb’s exhibition will focus on the following species: Montezuma Quail, Aztec Thrush, Aplomado Falcon, and Coati.






Tomb combines experience in the field with research of bird specimens at the California Academy of Sciences and the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at UC Berkeley. His final masterful renderings of the birds are life size and depict the birds in their natural habitat. As an avid birder, Tomb has been lucky enough to have his nerves rattled by the freaky chorus of Chachalacas in the thorny scrub and to have glimpsed the jewel-like Elegant Trogon during July monsoons.

Here are some photos from the exhibit:






all information and images courtesy of the gallery and the artist.

Tomb received his BFA from California State University Long Beach and has shown nationally and internationally.

Plants for the installation generously provided by The Dry Garden, Oakland.

The SF Electric Works Gallery site.
For purchasing information, please contact Noah Lang via email or at 415.626.5496. Prices and availability are subject to change.


if you're not familiar with Tomb's figurative work, check out my post on that here.

the artist's own website

Alphabet Aviaries: Shadowboxes by David Montgomery



David Montgomery, an artist who studied landscape painting and sculpture in college, has had a varied artisan career. He's created scenery, design models and props for theatre and opera, was a cabinet maker and carpenter, built historic re-creations for museum installation, created special effects, animations, and miniatures for television and cinema and crafted elaborate scale models for a high-tech firm.

But now, David feels he's found the perfect outlet for those numerous talents making one of a kind, hand crafted wooden shadowboxes within which are narrative scenes containing small birds. He calls them "Aviaries."

Living in an arts and crafts house in southern Vermont with his frequent collaborator and wife, metal artist Karen Krieger and his young daughter, David seems to have found his niche. And now I get to share it with you.

Alphabet Aviaries

The Alphabet series is a project that David started in late 2007. A planned series of twenty-six of his hand crafted Aviaries. Each shadowbox is composed on a different theme, chosen after he scoured the English dictionary for interesting words that conjured up visual scenes from his memory or imagination.

He had originally expected them to be simple, the whole set of twenty-six comprising the finished piece. But as each Aviary developed, he says they became more elaborate, complex, and time-consuming — and, he hopes, the better for it.

At present he has completed 15 of them - just over half-way through the Alphabet series, and expects to finish before the end of 2009. He even tucked the title of each piece somewhere within the artwork, some more hidden than others.

Aqueduct:

detail:

Elope:

detail:

Gravity:

detail:

Hearth:

detail:

Inertia:

detail:

Journey:

detil:

Levitate:

detail:

Moongate:

detail:

Nocturne:

detail:

Oriel:

detail:

Queue:

detail:

Roll:

detail:

Safe:

detail:

Vigil:

detail:

Waiting:

detail:


All of the above items are available (if not yet sold) here at Uncommon Goods.

David Montgomery - artist’s statement:

above: the artist at work

I think of each Aviary as a thin slice of a world, a window that leads to somewhere you've been or a place you'd like to go. The scene is never about birds, but the birds are nonetheless essential; they are your guides into my imaginary world.

A couple of years ago I began sketching ideas for dioramas and shadowboxes, around the same time that I found a pair of hundred-year old Audubon posters and some antique hardware at a local auction—the sole Saturday night entertainment near our rural home. These bits of the past provided inspiration for what were to become the Aviaries. In them I slightly alter the natural world, creating a place of mystery, romance, and occasional magic.

The Aviaries are limited edition or one-of-a-kind shadowboxes made of wood, brass, paper, glass, antique hardware, and various other materials. Backgrounds are sometimes ephemera collected in my travels, or are hand-painted in gouache, ink, acrylic or watercolor. The birds I cast in resin, using molds made from my original carvings, then I individually shape and hand-paint them. I carefully consider color, pose and placement of birds as the final step in construction.



Working Birds Studio