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Overview
Gladwell Patterson have long championed David’s artistic and charitable work, across the three generations of the Fuller family. Together with the David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation, the gallery held the first retrospective exhibition of David’s work since his death in January 2019.
David Shepherd stands as one of the most influential wildlife painters of the past century, an artist whose deep affinity for the natural world shaped a career of remarkable breadth and significance. His paintings, at once commanding and tender, reflect a lifelong bond with the animals of Africa, a connection forged in Kenya in 1960, where a commission for the RAF set him on an artistic path that would define his life’s work. It was there, confronted by the beauty of the wild and the brutality of its threats, that David’s vocation as both artist and conservationist took root.
The power of his paintings lies not only in their technical mastery: the confident sweep of his brush, careful orchestration of tone and balance between photorealism and impressionist breadth. Elephants emerge with monumental grace, tigers with a quiet, unstoppable presence; even the vast African landscapes serve not as backdrop but as a stage upon which each animal’s dignity is affirmed. What resonates most is the empathy that animates every canvas, a quality that reflects David’s unwavering belief in the value of the wildlife he devoted his career to protecting.
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Werke
David Shepherd British, 1931-2017
ElephantOil on Board20 x 25 cms / 7¾ x 9¾ inches
Signed 'David Shepherd 96' (lower right)
Sold as a set of five, alongside 'Cheetah', 'Buffalo', 'Lion' and 'Rhino'£62,000 (Set of Five)Weitere Abbildungen
Description
Elephant depicts an adult elephant standing prominently in the foreground, flanked by a smaller elephant set further back in the landscape. The figures are positioned on open ground beneath a pale sky, with distant forms suggesting a broad savannah setting. The foreground elephant is rendered frontally, its ears extended and trunk lowered, while the secondary figure establishes depth. David Shepherd constructs the forms using thickly applied oil paint in greys and warm earth tones, with visible texture across the animals and ground. Elephant was painted in relation to Shepherd’s extensive travels across East and Southern Africa in the later twentieth century. Elephants remained a central subject throughout Shepherd’s career, reflecting sustained observation during conservation-focused expeditions and advocacy work.
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