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Snowy Owl on Fallen Willow

Regular price$60,000.00 CAD Sale price
Snowy Owl on Fallen Willow 1971
by Robert Bateman Wildlife Artist
29" x 48"

“Willows grow in places which provide excitement to the naturalist. I grew up on a ravine which was dominated by giant willows. They formed a great, green canopy in summer and a twisted, superstructure in winter Since they form cover and shelter in damp areas they provide a good place for birds in any season. They grow so fast that they seem older than they are, and sometimes the weight of an oblique branch brings it crashing down, splitting the tree but not killing it. With the willow’s irrepressible vitality the fallen branch will send up new branches resulting in a tree of great complexity.

The branch in this painting is part of a fallen willow by a frozen lake, where snowy owls are on the lookout for weakened waterfowl or meadow mice. The festoons of wild cucumber indicate last summer’s lush tangle, and the yellow twigs predict the rush of life of the approaching spring.” – Robert Bateman


Provenance:  
James Bruce Falls (Robert's Friend)
Private Collection
Donated to the Bateman Foundation

“Art can awaken affection, and affection is often the beginning of conservation.”

Wildlife Artist Robert Bateman

Robert Bateman (b. 1930, Toronto) is one of the world’s most recognized wildlife artists and a lifelong naturalist. A former high school teacher with a degree in geography, he turned to full-time painting in 1976. His finely observed realist works reflect a deep commitment to ecology, and his art has helped raise millions of dollars for conservation causes worldwide.

Artist Statement

“I have always been both an artist and a naturalist. For me, painting is a way of paying attention—of honouring the particularity of each creature and place. Realism allows me to share what I’ve seen and felt in the field, and to remind us that these wild lives and habitats are fragile, irreplaceable, and worth protecting.”

Robert Bateman

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