Birds Make the Art, Part 7

Whether it鈥檚 dreary out near you (like it is near us) or you鈥檙e relaxing on your May Day day off, enjoy another installment of our Birds Make the Art series. This time, we鈥檝e got some beautiful woodcut prints and paintings.

Artwork by
Long, a freelance illustrator, lives in the countryside on the border of England and Wales. 鈥淢y work is an assortment of eccentric individuals in a variety of guises,鈥 she says, 鈥減layful, humorous and a touch surreal.鈥

Woodcut prints by
After a 30-year hiatus, Smith started painting and printmaking again. She loves color and patterns鈥攕omething her work makes clear鈥攁nd through her art, she says she鈥檚 attempting to transfer nature鈥檚 beauty to a two-dimensional surface.

Paintings by
鈥淲ith my art, I aspire to offer a sense of spaciousness, an opening, an invitation to contemplate the nature of life,鈥  Th茅berge says, 鈥渁nd explore what underlies the material world.鈥 Though she does create art with other materials, she works mostly with watercolor on paper (like the three watercolors below).

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Previous Birds Make the Art posts:

, artists Ana Jones, PopcaPopca Studio, and Amanda Krauss
, artist Claire Brewster
, artists Tina Burke, Tricia Arnold, and Julie Ann Glenzinski
, artists Tom Toro, Josh Durant, and Dinuk Magammana
, artists Anne Wertheim, Rob Fulton, and Angela Rizza
, artists Denise Marks, Mark Armstrong, and Kurt Swanson

Want to see your bird art on the Perch? E-mail Associate Editor Michele Berger at mwberger@audubon.org. Please include 鈥淏ird art鈥 in the subject line.