Monday 28 December 2015

#692 Retrospective






SANDY SCOTT: A RETROSPECTIVE
Traveling Museum Exhibition Produced by David J. Wagner, L.L.C.


TOUR ITINERARY


October 1 - December 31, 2015
Center for the Arts of Bonita Springs
Bonita Springs, FL
artcenterbonita.org

January 23 - April 24, 2016
Brookgreen Gardens
Murrells Inlet, SC
brookgreen.org

June 1 - August 31, 2016
Sternberg Museum of Natural History
Fort Hays State University
Hays, KS
sternberg.fhsu.edu

October 22, 2016 - April 30, 2017
National Museum of Wildlife Art
Jackson Hole, WY




Shown below, on the cover of  the current "Art of the West", is 
a brilliant painting by  Logan Maxwell Hagege.  






Shown below and on the inside cover, is an ad for the 
Retrospective in the current issue of
 "Art of the West" magazine.





This blog has been temporarily suspended due to retrospective commitments but will post again soon.

Go to the BLOG INDEX and Reference Page for more information.  



Blog, text, photos, drawings, and sculpture . . . © Sandy Scott and Trish

Monday 21 December 2015

#691 Merry Christmas!


Merry Christmas from our house to yours!


We hope your Christmas is merry and bright . . . if you live in Wyoming, it's sure to be white!

Shown above is my little snowbound studio cabin along the Popo Agie River where I paint. 
The photo was taken this morning looking north from the sculpture design studio.


Go to the BLOG INDEX and Reference Page for more information.  


Blog, text, photos, drawings, and sculpture . . . © Sandy Scott and Trish

Monday 14 December 2015

#690 Deer antlers


Male members of the deer family, including moose and elk,
grow antlers which are extensions of the skull.
Their main purpose is to attract females and to fight
other males.  Antlers and shed and grow back every year.
When a buck is growing antlers, they are referred to as being
in "velvet".  Along with moose and elk, the two other deer
species found in Wyoming are Mule Deer and Whitetail.

Below are etchings showing the difference between a Mule Deer and Whitetail buck's antlers.
Notice the points on a muley's antlers split and fork in two directions while a Whitetail
 buck's antler points grow off of one main beam and do not fork.

Mule Deer


Whitetail Deer


Below, is an etching of a Mule Deer entitled, "The Itch".


Below, is a little oil study in progress of a Whitetail buck.


Below is a sculpture of a Whitetail Deer
"Swamp Buck"
15"H 13"W 6"D
Edition 65
2,400

Below is a sculpture head study of a Whitetail Deer
"Whitetail Bust"
14"H 8"W 6"D
1,200


Blog, text, photos, drawings, and sculpture . . . © Sandy Scott and Trish


Monday 7 December 2015

#689 White-tailed deer


Both Mule Deer and White-tailed deer are found in Wyoming
but Mule Deer are more prevalent.I see muleys daily where I live in
the Lander Valley located on the eastern slopes of the Wind River Range.
Occasionally, White-tails are to be found on the western slopes of the continental
divide, but not often.White-tails are typically considered an eastern deer but we have
them and the further east you go from Wyoming,the more common they become . . .
the Rocky Mountains are the cut-off of their range to the west.

My studio is located on a river that flows into the eastern drainage of the Wind River
and there is a resident herdof White-tail deer a few miles northwest of us . . .
we don't see them often but today a doe and a yearling were out in the harsh,
snowy weather.  Below, are images.














Below, are images of etchings entitled,"First Snow" and "White-tail in Snow".





Below, are images of sculptures entitled, "Swamp Buck" and "White-tail".


"Swamp Buck"
15"H 13"W 6"D
Edition 65
2,400



"Whitetail
12"H 12"W 4"D
Edition 65
2,400


"Whitetail
12"H 12"W 4"D
Edition 65
2,400



Blog, text, photos, drawings, and sculpture . . . © Sandy Scott and Trish