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Enchère actuelle: 8 000 $ CAD
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Historique des enchères
# de palette Date Prix

942733 06 juin 2024 | 20 : 55 : 43 8 000 $ Enchère automatique

La liste de l'historique des enchères a été mise à jour le: samedi, 22 juin 2024 | 21h 47m 19s

LOT 109

OC
1930 -
Canadien

Winter Wren
acrylique sur panneau
signé et daté 1979
11 3/4 x 15 1/2 po, 29.8 x 39.4 cm

Estimation : 10 000 $ - 15 000 $ CAD

Exposition à : Heffel Toronto – 13 avenue Hazelton

PROVENANCE
Collection privée, Ontario

BIBLIOGRAPHIE
Rick Archbold, Robert Bateman : An Artist in Nature, page 88, reproduit page 89
Stanwyn G. Shetler, Portraits of Nature : Paintings by Robert Bateman, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1987, page 15


This work was produced after a watercolour sketch the Bateman made in Algonquin Park as a teenager after rediscovering his sketchbooks. Perhaps unexpectedly, Bateman cites the influential Quebecois abstractionist Paul-Emile Borduas as the inspriation for this composition, drawing from the automatist's stark use of blacks and whites: "It is partly from him that I learned to appreciate the Yang and Yin of dark and light, which is what this picture is about as much as the bird."

Robert Bateman is celebrated internationally for his original artworks and limited edition prints that capture the wonder and majesty of wildlife. As botanist Stanwyn G. Shetler wrote in an exhibition catalogue for the Smithsonian Institution, “As artist he is able to convey a vivid comprehension of diversity because, as naturalist, he has mastered the particularity of nature.”

The artist’s passion for nature can be traced to his teenage years, when he worked summers at a government wildlife research camp in northern Ontario. At university he studied geography, taking geological field trips to remote locations including Ungava Bay and Hudson Bay. After being accredited as a teacher of geography and art, he undertook with friends a round-the-world trip by Land Rover with stops in Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and Australia. Such adventures would inform his renowned environmental advocacy, as a fundraiser and spokesperson for the protection of animals’ natural habitats.

The recipient of numerous awards and honorary degrees, Bateman was named a “Hero of Conservation” by the National Audubon Society. In 2015, he was the first visual artist to win the World Ecology Award from the Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center. Besides the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, his works have been shown in prestigious galleries around the world and are held by public institutions including the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, the Denver Art Museum, the Glenbow Museum, the Hamilton Art Gallery and the National Museum of Wildlife Art, in Jackson, Wyoming. His artistic journey and significant contributions to both art and conservation will be featured in an exhibition at the Penticton Art Gallery, Unexpected Bateman, from July 5 to September 14, 2024.


Tous les prix affichés sont en dollars canadiens.


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