John James Audubon was an American artist and naturalist best known for his detailed paintings of North American birds. Audubon’s color-plate book The Birds of America (1827–1839), is widely acclaimed ...
But surely most visitors will be drawn to the works of John James Audubon (1785-1850), an artist whose passion and outsized works have cast all other nature artists into the forest shade.
Whether you're interested in colonial furniture, period architecture, tropical greenery or artist and naturalist John James Audubon, you'll find a host of curiosities at the Audubon House ...
He decided to create illustrations, in the style of famous 19th century French-American illustrator John James Audubon, of birds that were around in Audubon's time, but somehow eluded him.
The Ortlip Gallery celebrated the opening of Ian Campbell’s "After Birds" exhibit on Friday, Oct. 25, at the Center for the ...
John James Audubon was a self-trained artist ... but his membership was rejected amid allegations that some of his engraved ...
Discover the fascinating and controversial legacy of John James Audubon, the artist behind 'Birds of America' at this St. Pete MFA exhibit.
They are doing this because the organization’s namesake, John James Audubon, was a slave owner when he resided ... Famously, ...
Pocock, who has worked on the JWST, catalogues the science behind its most stunning images in her new book, Webb's Universe. Here's her pick of the telescope’s best shots ...
In the extensive publications about John James Audubon (Fig. 1), the artist-naturalist who was America’s first great watercolorist, his art has not received the same attention as his dramatic life ...
John James Audubon was a self-trained artist ... AFP PHOTO / XAVIER LEOTY (Photo credit should read XAVIER LEOTY/AFP via Getty Images) In 1824, peers nominated him to the Academy of Natural ...
John James Audubon was a self-trained artist, woodsman and bird expert whose fascination with his feathered friends led him to create pictorial guides to at least 490 bird species across North ...