My comments
about this series - Lynn Rupe
These paintings depict wild animals in urban
environments -- a lion
in a traffic jam, etc. The situation is absurd of course. It is equally absurd, I think, to believe I
that the minuscule islands of habitat that remain available
for wild animals are adequate homes for them.
I am particularly shocked by the impossible demands
on migrating animals Where can they land? Where can
they find refuge?
The
gorillas, lions, rhinos, narwhals, warthogs - are passing through the
“urban jungle”. They show up as very unusual pedestrians on very busy streets or perhaps they are
stranded on a bit of grass or water in an otherwise completely hardened, urban
situation. Sure, there are animals that can thrive in cities with humans
– the pigeons, the rats, the dogs and the cats. And of course there is
the stray moose or two that wanders down
Note:
The rhinos,
elephants and gorillas that inhabit my paintings can be easily
identified but I’m not sure most people will recognize the blue birds
flying high above the city traffic. They
are Spix's macaws - circling just above the jaws of extinction. There are only a few left and all remain in captivity. One male
survived for 10 years in a remote portion of the Brazilian rainforest.
There were several attempts to release willing female Spix's macaws in his
vicinity but he never mated with them. So, except for those in the zoos,
Spix’s macaws have departed this
world.
LynnRupe.com