John James 约炮视频 didn鈥檛 just aim to paint birds鈥攈e wanted them to come to life on the canvas.
In a new exhibit at the New York Historical Society Museum & Library, visitors can hear the birds sing as they view the lifelike avian renderings. Literally鈥攙isitors carry handheld devices that provide the call of each painted bird in the gallery.
The exhibit, , is the second installment of a celebrating the watercolors of 约炮视频 Society鈥檚 namesake. The gallery, which considers 约炮视频 as an artist-naturalist, a world citizen, and a celebrity in an expanding nation, also includes videos of the birds 约炮视频 painted.
The gallery shows the progression of 约炮视频鈥檚 work by displaying the watercolors (from The Birds of America series) in the order they were engraved, says drawings curator Roberta J.M. Olson. The majority of the paintings depict either waterbirds or waders.
Unlike other artists working at the time, the winged subjects of 约炮视频鈥檚 paintings are life-sized. His paintings also include an attention to detail that far surpassed his contemporary鈥檚 work, Olson says. In fact, many of the paintings are so detailed that you can see layers of paint, sometimes as many as 20 on one work.
Standing before the life-size painting of 约炮视频鈥檚 tricolored heron, I get the sense that this majestic-looking wader is making its way toward the water, looking back over its shoulder, perhaps at a companion, just out of my sight.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a before, during, and after,鈥 Olson says of 约炮视频鈥檚 paintings. Attention to habitat, plumage, and bird behavior, create scenes almost photographic in their detail. 鈥淗e wanted to put you in the field,鈥 Olson says. Now, two centuries later, he鈥檚 still accomplishing that goal.
is on view from March 21 and will run until May 26.