John James Audubon painted the natural world with a deep love and a nearly obsessive lust. His renditions of North American bird species are some of the most celebrated depictions of the natural world ...
On Aug. 22, the New Bedford Art Museum/ArtWorks! will say goodbye to 31 John James Audubon prints featuring species of birds that are currently declining or extinct and hello to 31 all new prints. A ...
“American Animals” may not have been the blockbuster film of the summer, but it told the fascinating and true story of 20-year-old Warren Lipka, who planned a daring theft in Lexington, Kentucky, in ...
NEW BEDFORD - The New Bedford Art Museum/ArtWorks! announces the opening of a new exhibit, Birds of the First Light and Longhouses: The Prints of John James Audubon. The exhibition, on display through ...
In 1826 John James Audubon set out to publish a collection of engravings of every known bird species in North America. “Most people thought this was a completely crazy idea,” said Don Luce, curator of ...
ALBANY -- The stunning avian colors in John James Audubon's life-size color lithographs have been clouded by smoke from the 1911 Capitol fire and a century of benign neglect, but the valuable bird ...
When: The exhibit’s opening runs from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday. The prints will stay up at Dodson’s for two weeks. Where: Dodson’s Jewelers, 516 W. Riverside Ave. Admission: Free, with a suggested donation ...
Some of the most celebrated wildlife images in U.S. history will be displayed this spring and summer at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. “Drawn to Nature,” a collection of 75 John James Audubon bird ...
Bright, beautiful birds of Florida greeted John James Audubon on his trek through Florida, and many of the creatures he saw firsthand ― some of which are extinct ― will be displayed through original ...
PHILADELPHIA — Conservator Anna Krain sprinkles what looks like grated Parmesan cheese on a 19th-century print of winter wrens and rock wrens. But these crumbs are pure white vinyl eraser. Under Krain ...
“Audubon had to take the watercolors to London and to Havell because there simply weren’t any presses in the United States in the early 19th century capable of fulfilling his vision,” said Jane Toczek ...
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