Order online or call : 800-206-3715 | FREE Light Box With Purchase | SHOP Jazz Sculptures
Status: In Stock Available | Condition: New | Edition:Limited Edition Canvas | Edition Size: Limited Edition Of 125 | Dim:20 inches wide by 15 inches tall | Bonnie Marris| Item #: M00083
Price: $ 395.00 USD..
or 3 equal layaway payments in store, with a credit card of $131.67 over 60 days
Layaway Details Here.
Get Your Cost for International Delivery
Within The Continental USA Only.
Get More Details
Available for
purchase
today, October 6, 2024
No Sales Tax Except In The State Of Florida.
As an option you may also pay for Bonnie Marris Idle Hours
Canvas
using Paypal or with your Amazon Account(*select items). Please note that all orders must be delivered to a physical address verified by Paypal or Amazon. .
Idle Hours
LIMITED EDITION CANVAS - M00083
NOTES: “Last September I spent seven days backpacking in Yellowstone, which has been a central inspiration for me as an artist,” said artist Bonnie Marris, “but this recent trip was a special gift. I saw so much wildlife and had the joy of camping near the Druid wolf pack for 3 days.” Both the male and female pass time bonding with their pups. There are many Idle Hours with no agenda other than tenderness and play. A wolf’s eyes seem to always have a remote distance, but this mother is in her own world, a place of incredible security, with her two pups. “This is the painting I always wanted to do,” Bonnie said. “I felt somehow completed when it was finished.” Wolves are especially popular among her collectors, too. Previous Fine Art Edition wolf family portraits such as The Ties that Bind and Sing Out are Sold Out at Publisher..
Idle Hours Canvas by Bonnie Marris is signed by the artist and comes with a certificate of authenticity.
image Copyright © 2024 by Bonnie Marris
Bonnie Marris has taken an unusual path into art; she developed her talent by portraying animals "from the inside out." While she was a student at Michigan State University, Bonnie illustrated several major books. One volume she worked on was a leading expert s mammalogy text that contained several hundred drawings and detail studies. This massive project attracted the attention of noted zoologist George Schaller, who invited Bonnie to prepare the art for posters that would support his worldwide rare animal relief programs. Beyond academic training and emotional involvement, art requires another element for which there is no substitute: experience. Each year, Bonnie makes two major trips, and countless smaller ones, to observe and learn about the wildlife she loves. In 1980, one such voyage took her to Alaska, where she lived in the wilderness for six months. She recounts, "To get into a natural environment and see the animals on their own terms is as important as knowing the animals themselves. For instance, gray wolves on the tundra—the vast, vast tundra with the wind and other forces of nature at their most extreme—that s what makes them what they are. To stand not far from a grizzly that is so overpowering, so beautiful and so large . . . to watch it pull up a small tree with a swipe of its paw and just a few minutes later see it delicately picking blueberries with its black lips. . . Alaska changed me; it gave me the biggest incentive to paint and increased my interest in the predators: the cats, bears, coyotes, wolves and foxes. They exist on so many levels. Their moods show in their eyes and we can learn so much from them."