Transcript Document

John James
AUDUBON
1785 – 1851
French-American Painter
ART HERITAGE PROGRAM
Grand Junction, CO
©2008
John James AUDUBON
The slides and other materials for this program were
paid for by a 1997 grant from the Grand Valley
Audubon Society, PO Box 1211, Grand Junction, CO.
81502 Funding to create this unit was also
contributed by the Public Service Company and
Fruita Monument High School.
Copyright 4/2008. Property of the Mesa County Valley School District 51, Grand Junction, CO. This article was
created for the express use of the Art Heritage Program for educational purposes only. No part may be copied in part
or in whole without permission.
Certain materials are included under the fair use exemption of the U.S. Copyright Law and have been prepared
according to the multimedia fair use guidelines and are restricted from further use.
The information contained within this artist unit is a compilation of information gleaned from several sources, some
unknown. If credit has not been properly given, please contact our office so this can be corrected.
Jean Jaques Audubon (1785 – 1851)
was a French-American painter who
created life-size paintings of
American birds in their habitat
engaging in daily routines.
His work helped clarify bird names
and identify birds that had not been
described or named before.
He tried to paint the male, female,
and young of a species because the
plumage and shapes were often
different for each.
His field notes and observations
helped add to the understanding of
birds, their routines, and their habitat.
1. PORTRAIT OF AUDUBON:
1826: By John Syme:
2. Male Wild Turkey (Plate I).1827. 26” x 39”.
(Close –up) of Male Wild Turkey (Plate I).1827.
26” x 39”.
3. BALD EAGLE: Plate 6: (Birds of America)
4. GOLDEN EAGLE:
(watercolor, graphite and pencil. 38 x 25 ½
in.) New York Historical Society.)
5. GREAT HORNED OWL:
1814-male, 1821-female;
35 1/8 x 24 7/8 inches
6. LITTLE SCREECH OWL (MOTTLED OWL):
Plate 97, 1829). Hand colored, aquatint etching.
The Birds of America double elephant folio
7. 7. MOCKINGBIRD: 29 3/4 x 20 7/8 inches
8. BLUE JAY: Plate 70: 1825:
9. Robin
10. CLIFF SWALLOW: (1827-38, Handcolored aquatint, etching and line
engraving, 25 7/8 inches x 36 1/2 inches)
11. SANDHILL CRANE: (Caption on print: Hooping Crane. The
painting from which this print was made was done in Boston
during the winter of 1832-33, using a living crane as the model.
Audubon's background is intended to be of Florida sandhills.)
12. IVORY-BILLED WOODPECKER: (Painted in Louisiana
1825.)
13. CAROLINA PARAKEET: 1827-38,
Hand-colored aquatint, etching and line
engraving, 25 7/8 inches x 36 1/2 inches
1.PASSENGER PIGEON: 26 1/4 x 18 1/4 inches, 1824.
14. PASSENGER PIGEON: 26 1/4 x 18 1/4 inches,
1824.
•ARCTIC HARE: (1841)
15. ARCTIC HARE: (1841)
Audubon left us a priceless legacy
about what our country and its
wildlife were like in the late 1700s.
He explored frontier areas of
America. He painted and wrote
about birds that no longer exist.
His journals, letters, and books
contain information about the people
he met, his thoughts and his
observations of nature.