Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Brown Creeper

It's been a while since I have done a Pen & Ink so this little guy took shape this afternoon.  Brown Creepers can be found year around but they often are overlooked any time of year because of their inconspicuous presence.  Their call is very high pitched and quiet, at times beyond the range of some humans.  They quietly go about the business of extracting insects from the cracks of the bark of trees, hitching themselves up and down the trunk in a spiraling manner, usually not disturbed by human presence.  They are never seen on the ground and their flight is fairly short as they move from tree to tree.  They usually build their nest behind a large piece of loose hanging bark about fifteen to twenty feet off the ground. 

4" x 6"  Pen & Ink on Arches Watercolor paper.            $50.00










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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Northern Pygmy Owl, framed.

I have now framed The Northern Pygmy Owl.  This is an 8" x 8" mixed media painting framed in an 11" x 14" frame with art on the mat.  It has been a while since I have done art on the mat and I am working on a series of Art on the Mat paintings so continue to check my blog.  This complete package is available for $195.  Difficult to photograph works under glass without reflection. You can see the unframed art in a previous post dated March 21, 2012.   Thanks for checking out my art.  Subscribe and receive updates.







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Thursday, May 24, 2012

Lewis's Woodpecker

With the completion of the Lewis's Woodpecker portrait, I have done all the species that are found in my home county of Deschutes in Oregon. This is the Lewis's Woodpecker, one of the larger woodpeckers.  These birds differ from most woodpeckers in that a majority of their food comes from flying insects so they are seen "flychatching" during the months of May through about October when they are present in Oregon.  Lewis's woodpecker was named by famed explorer Meriweather Lewis on that great exploration expedition back in 1803 and 1804.  In recent years in central Oregon, they have been somewhat in decline until a very successful nest box campaign was started by the East Cascade Bird Conservancy back in about 2006.  They were declining because their nest choice of dead pine snags were vigorously cleared to help deter forest fires.  The nest box project has worked very well and in any give year at least 85% have been occupied.

Mixed Media         4" x 4"      $75.00







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Sunday, May 20, 2012

Watercolor Canvas Board

I decided to experiment with a new surface today, Fredrix Watercolor Canvas Board.  I have done a couple watercolors on high plate illustration board over the years so thought this would be similar.  It is is some ways but there is a strange "absorption" quality to this canvas that is somewhat hard to control  The advantage of these smooth surfaces is that the paint sits on top and you can move it around freely but I found it strangely hard to get the paint to "settle" down once I reconstituted it.  One try is certainly not the final word but I am not happy with some aspects of this painting so I may try to go over it with Acrylic and see if I can produce an image I am more pleased with.  Stay tuned.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Anna's Hummingbird

Back in about 2004, a first year Anna's Hummingbird started showing up at a feeder in Central Ohio.  I did a painting of it for a certificate that was given by the Ohio Ornithological Society to the person who allowed hordes of birders on their property to view this lovely bird.  The original is for sale and is presented here for your viewing pleasure.

Original mixed media painting, 9" x 12"      $175.00



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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

My Woodpeckers on Postage stamps

Zazzle.com is a web store that sells custom made items by artists.  They sell mugs, T shirts, US postage stamps and much much more.  Check out my current products at Zazzle.  http://www.zazzle.com/my/products/public?sr=250368246542082387

My Woodpecker images can be purchased on us postage, check them out.


Thursday, April 19, 2012

Lady Slipper Orchid


My most recent painting is of a Lady Slipper. The Lady Slipper is an Orchid found in most of North America as well as parts of Europe and Asia. Growing up in Minnesota, I knew it as the state flower. I think this might be why it has been one of my favorite wild flowers. 

5" x 5"  Mixed media,  SOLD

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

White-headed Woodpecker

Except for a small pocket in the mountains of southern California, this is a Northwest specialty woodpecker.  This is why he is the star of our central Oregon woodpecker festival.  The Dean Hale Woodpecker Festival is held every June and is put on by the Central Oregon Audubon Society. 

White Headed woodpeckers are quite stunning and unique in behavior and appearance.  They are fairly common in their mountain range and in my county, they are common nesters above 4,000 feet.  They are about the size of a Hairy Woodpecker with glossy black back and very distinctive white patch near the wingtips that display nicely in flight.  The males have a red patch toward the back of the head.

Image Size is 4" x 4"  mixed media on arches watercolor paper.  $75








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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Northern Pygmy Owl

I moved to Central Oregon in 2006 and have been birding extensively since I arrived but it took me till the spring of last year to finally locate this wonderful bird.  It became my nemesis.  It was with the help of a wonderful local birder, Dean Hale, that I was finally able to tick this bird.  Dean was tragically killed in a head on collision this past weekend.  I chose to finished this painting, that I started last year, as a tribute to a much loved human being.

Original mixed media painting, 8" x 8"   $150







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Monday, February 6, 2012

American Three-toed Woodpecker

Continuing the Woodpecker series, the Three-toed Woodpecker is fairly similar to the Black-backed in the previous post but from behind can be confused with the Hairy which is similar in size and has a similar white pattern in the middle of the back.  Black-back and Three-toed  inhabit mostly the same habitat and ranges but Three-toed is slightly more widespread.  The Three-toed is  more petite over all and has a shorter bill.  As mentioned there is also some white streaking down the center of the back and facial patterns are different.  I have noticed in the field that the Black-back is more gregarious and has much louder drumming.  Often it is difficult to hear the Three-toed working a tree, they just quietly tap away.

Image Size is 4" x 4"  mixed media on arches watercolor paper.  $75 








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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Black-backed Woodpecker


Next in my woodpecker series is the Black-backed Woodpecker. Uncommon and localized inhabitant of northern Boreal and montane coniferous forests, comprising spruce, tamarack, red fir, hemlock, ponderosa pine, and lodgepole pine. In Oregon, they are mostly found in the cascade range and the blue mountains and the Wallowas. The are very fond of burned over and beetle infested forests so the best place to find them are in burns that are up to five or six years old. 

Image Size is 4" x 4"  mixed media on arches watercolor paper.  $75 






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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Art of Donald Sutherland on display...

It is always fun to see a body of my work on display and I welcome opportunities to hang my paintings in public. I was asked to join several other artists in a show that is now hanging on the second floor of St Charles Medical Center.  They are hanging at the end of the back hall from the cafeteria which is immediately to the left as you get off the elevator. The show will be hanging till the  middle of April.   To my Bend friends, please feel free to go out of your way to see them hanging because I would not want you to be at St Charles for any other reason :=) (unless of course you work there)

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Northern Flicker


The Flicker is a fairly ubiquitous woodpecker throughout North America.  They are yard birds throughout their range and can be found deep in the wild as well.  They have distinctive plumage differences between east and west, in the east the the shafts of their feathers are yellow and in the west the shafts are red. Ornithologists have pondered these differences over the years which lead at one point to splitting them into two separate species. Now, with DNA, the evidence suggests they are the same species so they are now called the Northern Flicker. Unlike most woodpeckers, you will see them sitting straight up on a branch as well as feeding on the ground.


Image Size is 4" x 4"  mixed media on arches watercolor paper.  $75







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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Red-breasted Sapsucker

Continuing the Woodpecker series with another Sapsucker, the Red-breasted Sapsucker. Their range is more coastal than the Red-napped, and the eastern Cascades is the farthest east of it's normal range in Oregon. As I mentioned, Red-breasted and Red-napped will inter bread where their ranges overlap making ID challenging in Deschutes County. Like all Sapsuckers, they drill and maintain sap wells on various conifer and deciduous trees but tend to prefer conifers. Very striking bird, indeed.

Image Size is 4" x 4"  mixed media on arches watercolor paper.  $75








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Monday, January 2, 2012

Red-napped Sapsucker


The Red-napped Sapsucker is found throughout most of the Western States interior. In Oregon, the Cascade range is basically the farthest west they go, being replaced by the Red-breasted Sapsucker further west and to the coast. Where they overlap they occasionally interbreed so it can be a challenge to ID them in our county. They drill, maintain, and defend sap-wells throughout their territory and will supplement with insects in the summertime. 

Image Size is 4" x 4"  mixed media on arches watercolor paper.  $75

For check payment or other payment arrangements email
birdartist@mindspring.com