拍品专文
“My work reacts to the history of natural history and the history of people's interactions with animals and other cultures and things like that. And our way of remembering natural history events and creatures that are now extinct.” – Walton Ford
By reviving the Audubon-style illustrations that invoke the pioneering expeditions of Charles Darwin, Walton Ford translates the careful observation and archival instinct of early naturalists into allegorical compositions that question humanity’s relationship with the animal kingdom. Executed in 1998, Funk Island is a classic example of his technique. Completed in painstaking detail with gouache, watercolor, graphite and ink on a single sheet of paper, Ford creates both imagery and atmosphere, all while maintaining the subtle social commentary that gives his art a sharp cerebral undertone.
In the monumental Funk Island, Ford depicts the flightless and penguin-like Great Auk birds violently and chaotically rushing towards a distant fire that ultimately signals their extinction while billowing clouds of coupled human figures rise from the flames. The Great Auk birds in the Arctic were slaughtered in massive quantities for their feathers, highly desired by early settlers for use in pillows and feather beds, which led to the birds’ total extinction by the end of the eighteenth century. Ford’s massive narrative painting is both a memorial to the extinct species, as well as a compelling critique on modern civilizations historical and continuous desecration of nature.
By reviving the Audubon-style illustrations that invoke the pioneering expeditions of Charles Darwin, Walton Ford translates the careful observation and archival instinct of early naturalists into allegorical compositions that question humanity’s relationship with the animal kingdom. Executed in 1998, Funk Island is a classic example of his technique. Completed in painstaking detail with gouache, watercolor, graphite and ink on a single sheet of paper, Ford creates both imagery and atmosphere, all while maintaining the subtle social commentary that gives his art a sharp cerebral undertone.
In the monumental Funk Island, Ford depicts the flightless and penguin-like Great Auk birds violently and chaotically rushing towards a distant fire that ultimately signals their extinction while billowing clouds of coupled human figures rise from the flames. The Great Auk birds in the Arctic were slaughtered in massive quantities for their feathers, highly desired by early settlers for use in pillows and feather beds, which led to the birds’ total extinction by the end of the eighteenth century. Ford’s massive narrative painting is both a memorial to the extinct species, as well as a compelling critique on modern civilizations historical and continuous desecration of nature.