Fluted Birdsnest Fungus, Cyathus striatus
Coralroot fungus on woodchip … like diving into a minuscule ocean …
Common Birdsnest Fungi on Woodchip … aren’t they beautiful? Only millimetres across. The yellow circles are the same fungi, not yet opened.
A few feet above the fungi, a Sorbus doing its autumnal thing with leaves and fruits
Well to be honest I was a bit suspicious about going to an exhibition of wildlife art: was it all going to be twee pictures of robins and blue tits painted rather too carefully to show all the distinguishing features? White horses galloping on the beach under moonlight, minus the horses, beach, and moonlight, in fact. It wasn’t terribly enticing. However, Tara had a work in the show so I thought I’d go and take a look. She doesn’t do twee birds in over-careful acrylics: she burns images of insects into pieces of wood (pyrography – the Greek means ‘writing with fire’), definitely different.
Tara’s signboard a few years ago when she was studying
A detail of Tara’s piece in the exhibition: Garden Spider. I guess you can see why I like it: it’s bold, fearless, marvellously detailed, accurate, burnt into the wood (lime wood in this case), and … definitely not in the twee robins for Christmas category.
Well, what about the other artists? Too many to mention, but here are a few that caught my eye.
Ben Woodhams’ funky Eider Ducks … definitely birds, certainly watercolour, but not twee at all. Good strong work. And quite a lot of real animal behaviour in there, too.
Christine Howes’ marvellous linocut of a Winter Wheatfield. Its restrained palette and marvellously strong swift aerobatic crows, and that wind-blasted bare tree contrasting with the blocky stones and the striped field make this a genuine work of art, not limited to any special category. Sorry about the reflections, that was my fault with the gallery lighting.
Sarah Rhiannon’s fine charcoal drawing of an African Wild Dog, titled ‘Wild Gaze’. She’s certainly captured quite a stare from that animal. Cute robins and blue tits? Forget it!
Richard Allen’s well-crafted linocut of a Red Kite. I guess I like monochrome, and the discipline of the medium: you can’t fuss about with a linocut or woodcut, and you have to get it right first time, no fumbling. Allen has created a vigorous design of the haughty raptor sailing past those puffy white clouds and over that far-below landscape where humans must live and work, earthbound.
Jill Moger’s splendidly executed stoneware ceramic of a Dwarf Tegu. Now ceramic animals … that’s difficult to do well. Twee is easy; so is naff; so is childlike clumsiness. Getting a realistic and watchful pose, as if the beast was just about to lunge for a fly or run from a predator, that’s impressive.
Casey Nadine Banwell’s Pangolin in cold-cast bronze. This is a pretty big sculpture, I guess life-size. The artist has captured the animal’s defensive behaviour marvellously, and its cautious gaze. The material’s natural colour and its resinous look seem to me just right for the subject.
Iain Nutting’s Thinking Gorilla in Corten steel. The unyielding material has allowed the artist to create an almost Cubist portrait of the animal. I’d love to tell you it was life-size, but it was about the same size as the Pangolin. Still, funkiness index 10/10. Twee Robins and Blue Tits index, nul point . Thank goodness!
Juan de Souza’s field sketch of Southern Elephant Seals: unmistakably dangerous wild animals, beautifully observed. De Souza spent months sitting on a windy Argentine beach sketching and drawing. You can almost hear the roaring.
Fallow Deer in long grass in early autumn sunshine, Richmond Park
Silver-Spotted Skipper nectaring on Sit-upon Thistle in Chalk Grassland, Watlington Hill
Beewolf with captured Bee, taking nectar on Bell Heather, on the sandy heath of Thursley Common.
Stags resting in the shade on a warm July morning. The hinds are away birthing in the bracken at this time of year; the rutting season has not begun.
Small Copper in Gunnersbury Triangle’s picnic meadow. Its wings have been damaged by multiple bird attacks, but … it’s still alive.
Toadflax Brocade moth caterpillar on Purple Toadflax
White-Tailed Bumblebee on Greater Knapweed
A Spotted Hoverfly on Weld
Crab Spider on Pyramidal Orchid
Soldier Beetles on Wild Carrot
Soldier Beetles Mating
Marbled White
Six-Spot Burnet Moth
Kidney Vetch
Female Small Skipper
Marjoram, a characteristic flower of Chalk Grassland
Parasitic Wasp
Chrysomelid Flower Beetle on ? Rough Hawkbit
Plume Moth
Pyramidal Orchids in Chalk Grassland
In the evening, I gave my ‘Urban Nature Reserve’ talk to a local group
Oedemera nobilis
This beautiful iridescent metallic green insect is the male thick-kneed flower beetle — the female is less colourful, and doesn’t have the swollen femurs. All the coloration is structural, created by microscopic ridges of the cuticle, the right size to interfere with visible light. The insect’s Latin name is Oedemera nobilis , the “noble swollen-parted” (yes, like Oedema, swelling), presumably describing the thick “knees” and the insect’s handsome appearance.
In Val Sugana
At Calvello, Val di Fiemme
Val di Fiemme
Brown Argus at Redagno
Dolomite landscape at Redagno
Idas Blue at Anterivo
Stone Grasshopper above Anterivo
Alpine meadow and forest, with wood-stacks, above Anterivo. The flower-rich grass is cut annually for hay.
Burnet Moth on Scabious above Anterivo
Scotch Argus at Anterivo
Fir forest, marsh with Birches, meadow, bog pool above Anterivo
Great Green Bush-Cricket above Anterivo
Silver-washed Fritillary on Devilsbit Scabious
Alpine Green Grasshopper, Val di Fiemme
Golden-ringed Dragonfly at Calvello
Well-maintained Alpine meadow at Calvello, with hingeless gate, Hazel bushes, Birch and Fir trees
Lingon or Cowberry at Calvello: far less common than Bilberry in the Dolomites
Chalkhill Blue, male, above Carano, on legume
Vetch and Thyme on limestone beside forest path (with fir-cone), Calvello
Chalkhill Blue, male
Pine Hawk-Moth caterpillar
Large Skipper on alpine pink
Large Pine Weevil at Calvello
Abandoned flowery meadow colonised by Fir trees, Val di Fiemme
Kestrel above Val di Fiemme
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The English seem unemotional … except for their passion for nature