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A Child Prodigy in the Arts



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By : John Chambers    29 or more times read
Submitted 2010-08-12 08:00:30
What makes animal portrait painting different from human portraiture is that animals don't like to pose. An artist has to put in a good deal of work just to keep the animal's attention on her.

One female artist from Wilmington specializes in this particular field. The Delaware family, who are well known locally, are related to her.

She has a grandfather whose artwork included a famous collection of sea and landscape paintings. It does not surprise us that this artist began painting at a very young age of 3.

Animals became the most frequent subjects she liked to draw. She displayed her work at her own one man show at the local library at age 12 and started illustrating books at age 12.

She got to learn how to dance a number of different kinds of dances because of the help she had been getting from her Philadelphia teachers.

She did dance for a number of years, including a convincing performance which showed her dying.

She makes portraits of various animals, though the dog remains her favorite. There is just something so interesting about the way she begins her work on the dog's portrait.

As the owner helpfully tries to keep the dog still, she is already drawing several sketches on her sketch pad.

Her pencil strokes are a flurry of movement over the sketchpad as she seeks to find which pose works best for the dog.

Meanwhile, she talks to the dog and compliments him for his appearance and behavior. To hold the animal's attention, she uses different props and even bits of food.

She requests for the photographs of the dog that the owner has and then asks if it's okay for her to duplicate any of them for her collection.

Snips from the ears, tail, and tummy are collected from the dog so that she can determine the colors to use. For every dog, there are snips that she files.

Selection of the pose and the background for the shot is the next thing she concerns herself with. A composition is selected based on the type of dog or animal.

To create the background of a Chesapeake Bay retriever portrait, she sat in a duck blind and made sketches of the surroundings.

She found out that animals can have their own opinions regarding something. One case that proves this is the American pointer who destroyed the worst painting of one artist who was sketching him.

It must have been bad or at least bad for him for he had to have quite a large dose of medicine to remedy this expression of disapproval.

On the back of the portraits of beagles of bassets, she puts the kennel club's identifying symbols, and for the scenery in the picture, she includes a paw print.

She has even obtained abstract backgrounds done with the help of her own dog's paw when he cooperates in painting.

There is hardly any cooperation that can most of the time be expected by animals. A model ran off with a female dog, putting a stop to whatever portrait painting was supposed to take place that day.

While this may seem natural, it also seems that the unexpected can be expected when painting an animal's portrait.
Author Resource:- As a person looking for pet portraits you should visit that site. Learn more on the topic of portraits of pets.
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