This is the last painting from the Sleeping Birds series, Chestnut Teals and Black-winged Stilts, ink and watecolour on paper, 30x40cm, from a beautiful place just about a hour north of Brisbane called Bribie Island, that place teems with wildlife..
Tuesday, 15 March 2011
Monday, 14 February 2011
More from the Sleeping Birds series....
Female Golden-shouldered Parrot, water colour on paper, 25x20.5cm, 2011. The species is endangered, they have a very intimate relationship with termites, they make their nest inside termites mounds at the same time the young termites bugs are hatching, so the termites keep the yung parrots warm and the baby parrots provide termites with food that is their droppings.. a good example of cooperation.
Tawny Frogmouth, water colour on paper, 24.5x28.5, 2011.
Thursday, 3 February 2011
Latest Yeronga Park Sketches
I am keeping an eye to that Scaly-breasted Lorikeets' nest, it seems they've got chicks to feed, while into the other couple's nest on the other side of the tree there doesn't seem to be a family... I've been using a new kind of art material experiment that is a fountain pen filled with watercolor paint (charcoal gray), it is giving brilliant results so far...
Thursday, 27 January 2011
The Sleeping Birds Series goes on...
I am a half way to finish this collection (10 artworks so far) ... this time I'm posting the Silver Gull and the Emu. I tried to use as less colour as possible for the Silver Gull, which is easy for gulls since they're very light coloured, while I needed to use a bit more for the sleeping Emu, I had this very close and sweet contact at the Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary in Brisbane. I can see in the Emu the influence that Louis Agassiz Fuertes has had on me...
Friday, 21 January 2011
Feathers
A few feathers found at Yeronga Park, Brisbane, to start a new journal. Stone Curlew (?), Masked Lapwing, Crested Pigeon and Tawny Frogmouth...
Friday, 7 January 2011
Little Corella
Cacatua sanguinea. I wanted to go out to draw birds, but the weather has been a bit wild lately in Qeensland, so I opted to do some studio work today. Sleeping birds are attractive and inspiring. Maybe I've just started a new body of work completely dedicated to sleeping birds... sounds like a great idea!
Monday, 20 December 2010
Scaly-breasted Lorikeets
First left: Rainbow Lorikeet, tail feather. Second: Scaly-breasted Lorikeet, tail feather. Third: Rainbow Lorikeet, primary covert.
Tuesday, 7 December 2010
Tuesday, 16 November 2010
The charm of Tawny Frogmouths
The air was thick with water, mosquitos everywhere eating us. The sun was pale at the Boondall Wetlands as we walked along a path that has been flooded recently after the heavy rains. Suddenly we saw her, the long awaited sighting has been finally accomplished. She soon realized we were watching her so she started 'being a branch'. The tawny, reddish colour of some feathers tells us it's a female. I wonder how many times we walked by a Tawny Frogmouth without seeing anything but being unwittingly watched.
Wednesday, 3 November 2010
Little Ringed Plover's chick
I rescued this little chick as he fell trapped through a hole between the rocks, although he seemed to be a bit weak he was able to run toward his mother who immediately took him under her wings. I was positive and hopeful since he didn't look too bad. I'm not sure how long he spent under those rocks in the sunshine without water. Unfortunately, the day after there were two chicks instead of three running about. As we all know, that's nature.
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