Showing posts with label sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sculpture. Show all posts

Friday, 24 July 2015

A puffin called 'Little Brother' and a few facts about puffins

Little Brother



Atlantic Puffin
(image from wikipedia)
 Little Brother
© Lisa Treadwell
Fratercula is the genus name for the puffin and is translated from the Latin as ‘Little Brother’. The smart black and white plumage of this bird must have reminded people of the attire of monks, and possibly that monks in days gone by also inhabited some of the islands puffins might be found nesting on.

Atlantic puffins like to nest in burrows they dig themselves, or use those made by rabbits. Lining these with grass and leaves the puffin couple make a cosy home to raise their chick, only one egg being laid. Both parents bring fresh fish back to the hungry puffling, efficiently holding several at a time, sometimes more than a dozen. The beak is hinged just so the upper and lower bills can clamp at various angles allowing the collection of more than one fish at a time. The puffling grows quickly on all this protein fledging in about six weeks. The youngsters stay under ground and when they are big enough they leave the burrow one night and head out to open sea remaining their for five years whilst maturing ready to raise their own pufflings. Puffins arrive at their breeding sites in early spring and leave in August to spend the winter at sea.

Bright orange legs and feet, the colourful bill and eyes that are accentuated by dark blue skin above and below giving the triangular appearance and by pale grey cheeks, earn the stocky little puffin the nickname ‘Clown of the Sea’. A group of puffins being a ‘Circus’.
 Little Brother
© Lisa Treadwell

Three species of puffin exist, the horned and the tufted puffin living around the pacific. All are members of the auk family. My sculpture was based on the Atlantic puffin Fratercula arctica. I wanted to capture what it is about this very charismatic and appealing bird, with a beak full of fresh fish you can imagine a feeling of pride as this stout little bird presents the catch to the young puffling.

The sculpture is made of laburnum wood, copper pipe for the beak with solder to seam it together and just give the suggestion of the arrangement of colours on an actual beak. The fish are of aluminium can. The eyes copper and the legs welded mild steel. The puffin sits on a piece of Portland Roach stone, the top layer of stone in the ‘Portland Formation’. This is a fossil rich limestone, very appropriate you can see the fossils of sea shells in this piece of stone.

The sculpture is exhibited at the National Exhibition of Wildlife Art until 2 August 2015:
http://www.newa-uk.com/pages/home.php

If you would like to know more about puffins take a look at these links:
https://www.seabird.org/wildlife/seabirds/puffin/12/26/46
http://www.rspb.org.uk/discoverandenjoynature/discoverandlearn/birdguide/name/p/puffin/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_puffin

More about Portland stone:
http://www.dorsetgeologistsassociation.com/Portland-Stone/Portland_Stone_Document_-_7_June_12.pdf

To see more of my work visit:
www.lisatreadwell.co.uk

Thursday, 16 August 2012

On naming a sculpture, scientific nomenclature and the strength of an oak tree


While Atlas held the world aloft on his mighty shoulders, Aristotle contemplated the relationships of living entities. In doing so he reasoned the foundations of a system for the classification of the natural world. Over the millennia this system was taken and refined by later scholars of natural history, until Carolus Linnaeus in the eighteenth century arrived at the ‘binomial’ system of assigning a universal name to a species. Hence Quercus robur, the common oak. The first part Quercus specifies the genus (a group that has characteristics in common, always written beginning with a capital and in italic), and robur the species (always lower case italic and species specific). By convention these names usually derive from Greek or Latin.

You may ask what has this to do with my art work? Well let me explain. As a visual artist I love creating, but once I have finished the work I really cannot be bothered about a name for it. It should work on its own, as a viewer you will make of it as you interpret. The thing is I very often get asked what a sculpture is called, or when being asked about a certain sculpture a name helps to avoid confusion with another. Therefore a name for my sculpture is not only useful, but as individual and unique creations I have eventually arrived at the conclusion they deserve their own specific name.

Hippocampus quercusat Natural Surroundings Norfolk
To view this sculpture and others by the auther click on
http://www.lisatreadwell.co.uk/woodsculpture.html
In the case of Hippocampus quercus, this particular sculpture kind of reminded me of a sea horse or something that lives under the sea, but seahorse, sub aqua or sea monster just did not sound right. I had fun creating this sculpture and so wanted a name that had a quirky sound to it.

I have always enjoyed the sound of the scientific names of dragonflies. They roll off the tongue in a multi syllabic flow - that is once you get the hang of pronouncing them. For example  Sym - pet - rum - sang - guin - e - um the ruddy darter which to my mind has an equally satisfying sound to it with its hint of expletive. Of course the reference is to the blood rich colouration of the dragonfly’s body and its darting nature.

The genus name for a sea horse is Hippocampus; it comes from the greek Hippos meaning horse and Kampos meaning sea monster, I think you will agree this has a satisfying sound to it. Hippocampus on its own is fine but not quite right, the sculpture is made of oak, so why not take Quercus which is latin for oak and is again a genus name, but for my sculpture I shall use it as the species name - hence Hippocampus quercus. Behold a new species is born, an oaken equine sea monster, which is sculpted from a fallen bough of Quercus robur. In latin robur means strengh. Quercus robur is strong like Atlas; its timber has held aloft the earth in the form of pit props and circumnavigated the worlds mighty oceans as ships. Two thousand or more individuals of Quercus robur making up any one ship. Quercus is renowned for its strength and endurance and unlike Atlas is no mythological being but a real entity who harbors in its cathedral of roots, trunk, bark, branches and foliage over four hundred other species all with their own scientific binomial.  Aristotle could not fail to be impressed.

Neozephyrus quercus the purple hairstreak butterfly sat on oak leaves,
the caterpillars of which feed on oak.
For more information on this butterfly visit
http://www.butterfly-conservation.org/Butterfly/32/Butterfly.html?ButterflyId=42

Thursday, 19 July 2012

Speckled Wood Butterfly and Inspiration



Finished watercolour painting of
Speckled Wood Butterfly
http://www.lisatreadwell.co.uk/Painting%20pages/butterflypaintin.html

‘Speckled Wood Butterfly’ and inspiration
Initially it appears dancing lightly around, a papery being that wishes not to be other than a part of the background it inhabits. This is my first impression on spotting a speckled wood butterfly. They are as subtle as the sun dappled hedgerows and woodland they like to inhabit. It is however on closer inspection a more sturdier creature than first crossed my vision, with creamy yellow spotting that sits well on rich brown wings.
I am able to revisit these impressions in my mind and with the photographs I have taken of this butterfly I was able to work out a design that exemplifies this ephemeral being of woodland and hedgerow.
To begin with I make some sketches, small rough thumbnails just to get a feel of where I would like to place things. I wanted to show off the rich creamy speckles contrasted to the deep chocolate browns on the upper surface of the wing and also the subtle range of colouration on those under wings. The photographs had been taken in August and the butterflies where settled on blackberries, the dark colours of which added emphasis to the creamy spots on the butterflies wings. A darkened background would through the butterflies into greater relief.
I was most pleased with this painting once I had finished it and on 24 May this painting was commended in the BBC Wildlife Artist of the Year Award 2012. All winning entries can be viewed at: http://www.discoverwildlife.com/gallery/bbc-wildlife-artist-year-2012-winners?utm_source=Responsys&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=NLT_WILD_050712_GE
To find out more about the speckled wood butterfly or other uk butterfly species visit the website of Butterfly Conservation http://www.butterfly-conservation.org/



An initial rough sketch

A rough watercolour sketch



Design layed out on Arches Aquarelle
paper and masked ready to put down
the first section of background

Background applied

Masking removed






Second area of background applied
and painting progressing to final image



 www.lisatreadwell.co.uk