Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

Friday, January 4, 2013

Transparent Animals








(Photo by Heidi and Hans-Jurgen Koch) Source: oddee.com via minouette on Pinterest



A few years ago, I made a post about a couple of transparent sea creatures: an octopus and one deep sea fish. Transparency, or translucency is something we might expect in say, jellyfish, or insect wings, or in microbiology but I've stumbled upon a whole collection of different animals who are more or less see-through.





The aptly named Glass frogs (frogs of the amphibian family Centrolenidae) of South and Central America may be mostly lime green, many have translucent abdominal skin through which internal viscera, including the heart, liver, and gastrointestinal tract are visible.










This translucent shrimp is sometimes called a "ghost shrimp".



(Photo by David Shale) Source: oddee.com via minouette on Pinterest



This North Atlantic animal called Phronima, uses transparency as a survival strategy and a means to be invisible.


Photo by Peter Batson) Source: oddee.com via minouette on Pinterest

The southern oceans' Glass Squid (Teuthowenia pellucida) "has light organs on its eyes and possesses the ability to roll into a ball, like an aquatic hedgehog."


Flatfish can be transparent in their early planktonic stage.

(Photo by Uwe Kils) Source: oddee.com via minouette on Pinterest


Even the blood of the crocodile icefish (Channichthyidae) is transparent, lacking hemoglobin and/or only defunct erythrocytes. Because they live in the very cold southern oceans, around Antarctica, which contain more oxygen it's believed they can absorb sufficient oxygen directly through their skin.





This is a transparent pelagic octopus.






We're familiar with translucent wings on flies and bees, but the lovely Glasswinged butterfly (Greta Oto) also has translucent wings.



Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Sir David Attenborough

David Attenborough by Elda The


Sir David Attenborough is one of the most popular naturalists and popularizers of natural science, anywhere in the world. His enthusiasm is infectious. He is articulate, mesmerizing and unfailingly fascinating. It's no wonder he's inspired some art about his passion for the animal world.



Father Earth by
Always With Honor



David Attenborough by Damien Weighill


Wait for it... "this is a camera shutter;" it's worth the wait.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Ceramic Might-Have-Beens

British ceramicist Sophie Woodrow knows that the Victorian fascination with nature (though it was firmly defined as 'other' than human), collecting and romanticizing nature in a way which was ultimately kitsch is a great place to seek ideas and inspiration. Though most Victorian science was of the 'descriptive' sort, I know I find their romantic and sometimes heroic collecting an inspiration myself; it is definitely a class of activity at the fertile intersection of art and science, like the building of wunderkammers (Cabinets of Curiosity), gathering everything from rocks, to ferns, to fossils, to exotic animal species from around the world. I love how she describes the Victorian "enormous misinterpretations of geological evidence" (particularly of biological evolution) as "a game of Chinese whispers1 played over millennia". She's been inspired by natural history, and our changing ideas about evolution, to create a growing collection of ceramic "might-have-beens". This makes me think of the Rhinogrades, the wonderous "might-have-evolved" creatures of Harald Stümpke [Gerolf Steiner]. Her imaginary-animal pots are likewise truly wonderful.

 
Bear (41 cm height)


Totem (39 cm height)

 
 Little Owl


 
 Crowd Scene

Here she speaks about her process:
 

 Be sure to check out both her recent work and archive!

Lou Lou & Oscar

 1 "Chinese whispers" is the British name for what North Americans call the game of "broken telephone" where a message passed by whispers from person to person, mutating as it travels along.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

headgear in the wild

Speaking of interesting things on heads, I love the series of illustrations of animals in hats by Lisa Hanawalt featured on the hair pin in honour of New York Fashion Week. Be sure to check out the rest. (via Etsy Tumblr)











The colour blocking morbidity bonnet is the best thing ever. I think she's satirizing fashion with love.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

The Oddballs, the Endangered, the Invasive & the Poodles

Jenny Pope's website J Pop Studios is a full zoo of exotic (and not so exotic) animal specimens in (colour reduction) woodblock print form. She tackles several topics in contemporary science, from flukes of evolotionary biology, to climate change, ocean acidification, pollution, extinction of the megafauna of Australia, invasive species as well as kitties & poodles.

She has a series investigating the effect of islands on evolution: 'Isolation Produces Oddballs' including the wonderously named, If Pygmy Elephants Climbed Trees (image size 13” x 17”)



which answers the question how did the 200 pound monitor lizard, the Komodo Dragon get so large? Apparently they were discovered on Flores, along with pygmy elephant bones - and sadly for them, the pachyderms are not known for tree climbing ability. She tackles 'Global Warming Band-aids' in her print 'Ocean Sequestration' (image size 19” x 23.75”) about the perils of simply trying to sequester CO2 in the deep ocean, and the consequent ocean acidification.



Colleagues of mine are working on the more sophisticated (but as of yet unproven on a large scale) possibility of sequestering CO2 in icelike 'clathrate' cage of hydrogen-bonded water molecules, known as CO2 hydrate - below the seafloor, rather than in the deep sea. So, this print reasonates with me as both a marine scientist and a printmaker.

Her South of North---The Lapping Territories of Bears (image size 32” x 24”) is about the strange fate of bears in far north, where the changing climate has lead to the discovery of the hybrid 'pizzly' (polar bear/grizzly cross).



Plane and a crane (image size 15” x 11.5”) in her 'Endangered Animals' series not only highlights the whooping crane, but also "Operation Migration," which uses ultralight planes to teach and re-introduce the migration which was lost when a certain population was destroyed, by having the birds imprint on the plane.



The invasive starlings are a problem where I live, as in many places in North America. They were introduced by Eugene Schieffelin who wanted to release all of the birds mentioned in William Shakespere’s plays. Sometimes romantic ideas and biodiversity are a bad mix. A Starling Guide to Night (image size 19” x 23.75”) is part of her 'Invasive Species' series.



Do yourself a favour and check out her large portfolio. I love the dynamic style and colour pallette of her prints, which combine the whimsy of children's illustration with serious, well-articulated subject matter. Her fascination with ecology, biology and obvious enthusiasm for science in general is infectious. I do love the medium of woodblock prints, and prints created at the art-science interface are likely to delight me, but I'm also very impressed with the background and information she provides with each print. You could learn a lot simply by reading about her subject matter. Despite her dismay at the way we treat our environment, she has a sense of the ridiculous - highlighting the absurdity of using of rubber ducks, turtles, frogs and beavers spilled from a container ship in 1992 to trace currents - or their imagined interaction with real marine animals, or some of our misconceptions about birds, from recent history. This makes her portfolio wonderful to explore, though the topics remain may be dire.

You should also check out her blog and her jpopstudios etsy shop - which also includes etchings.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Heads or Tails?

In time for Hallowe'en, I thought I'd bring you some illustrated mask-wearing personages, and dismembered body parts. Vancouver-based artist and illustrator Andrew Pommier draws and paints men who are ready for the worst. The may be wearing masks, or animal heads, dealing with ferocious pandas, or turning into trees, or be slouching through life carrying skulls.


"Hanging with the Gang" oil on wood 20" x 14" 2008


"Ready for the Worst" acrylic and graphite on wood 24" x 36" 2007


"Coming Upon a Scene of Carnage" acrylic and graphite on wood 20" x 24" 2008


"Fan Boy" oil on wood 20" x 24" December 2008


"Souvenirs from the Voyage" acrylic and graphite on wood 20" x 24" 2008


"Dinosaur Head" watercolour, ink, and graphite on paper 8.5" x 11" 2007


"Rabbit Head" watercolour, ink, and graphite on paper 8.5" x 11" 2006

Monday, October 25, 2010

Riding the Dodo and the Folk-Singing Wolf

Check out the illustrations of Melburn Australia's Genna Campton. She plays with scale, includes animals, fashion illustration, a hint of surreality and references Bob Dylan - what's not to love?


dodo races (2009)


chincilla (2009)


rooster greenstripes (2009)


peacock (2009)


wolf dylan (2009)

Find her site, blog and etsy shop at these links.

(via frankie magazine)

Monday, May 3, 2010

Mischievious Critters

Check out the illustrations of South African-born, Berlin-based illustrator, the Mischief Champion Katrin Hagen.









Interesiting artist portfolio tidbit: she includes "embed code" for her illustrations (which I've used). It's one way to try to make sure that your art spreads yet remains labelled with your name. I think it's clever.

Follow any of the links to her portfolio: lots of inter-special love affairs, ironic animals and strange advice. {via I'M REVOLTING}

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Robot Animals


Andrew Chase, Cheetah, (electrical conduit, auto transmission parts, 20-gauge steel and random parts found in an industrial salvage yard, weighs 50 lbs. The cheetah measures 24" high (61cm) and 50" nose to tail (127cm))

I am tempted to make no comment, and leave the robot cheetah running - it is a statement in and of itself. I don't believe the cheetah sculpture really runs, but it is fully articulated and this is a clever use of stop-motion. It is made by Andrew Chase, a "self-employed commercial photographer, furniture maker, welder as well as a highly talented assemblage artist" who likes to make robot animals with bits of cars and plumbing. I think this quixotic activity is genius.


The elephant weighs about 110 lb and took about 100 hours to build. It is made out of auto transmission parts, electrical conduit, plumbing pipe and 20 gauge cold rolled steel. All the joints move and lock in place. Turning a gear on the elephant's side winds a cable around a shaft which raises and lowers the fully articulated trunk. The ears also move back and forth and and fan out.



Giraffe (transmission parts, electrical conduit, plumbing pipe, and sheet steel. A removable crank raises and lowers its neck. 6 ft high)



Apparently, these will be part of a book called the Trionic Morphatractable Engineer.

{via bioephemera and io9}

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Hooves


Check our German artist/designer Iris Schieferstein's portfolio. The hoof shoes and Gun Hoofs are only the beginning. {via design-milk.}

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