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overview
Walker's rare ability to give to each of the animals he depicts their unique characteristics and personas, while dressing them up in old cast-off human garments never robs them of their intrinsic "animalness".
Jonathan Walker was born in 1966 in Staffordshire and grew up in the Moorlands, where early experiences of the landscape shaped his enduring interest in the natural world. Much of his childhood was spent exploring the countryside with his father, himself an artist, and this close observation of wildlife continues to inform his practice. As a teenager, Walker studied Philosophy, Theology and Fine Art before training as an Occupational Therapist, working for many years with individuals experiencing severe mental health challenges. In 1991 he moved to Devon, where he continues to live and work. The landscapes of Dartmoor and the surrounding countryside provide the setting for much of his work, with subjects drawn from direct observation of animals such as badgers, foxes and small mammals encountered near his home. Working primarily in watercolour, Walker combines careful draughtsmanship with a restrained, earth-based palette of siennas, ochres and muted greens.
His paintings sit within the tradition of British wildlife illustration, yet are distinguished by their emphasis on character and individuality. Each animal is observed closely and presented with a degree of personality, grounded in the physical realities of its environment. Surface, texture and setting are treated with equal attention, resulting in compositions that reflect both the structure of the animal and the conditions of the landscape it inhabits.
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Werke
Jonathan Walker
The NaturalistWatercolour16 x 11 cms / 6¼ x 4¼ inchesSigned 'Jonathan Walker' (lower left)Description
The Naturalist offers a charming glimpse into the woodland life of one of his most enthusiastic little adventurers. The painting captures a mouse paused mid-expedition on the forest floor, dressed in the manner of a Victorian field naturalist and caught in the very moment of looking up from his work, his bright eyes meeting the viewer's gaze with an expression that is at once slightly startled and unmistakably inquisitive, as though we have interrupted him in the middle of cataloguing some important discovery. Walker's title here is a beautifully apt one. The Naturalist conjures up the great tradition of British nature study, the world of Gilbert White, the country parson with his notebook, the gentleman scholar with his butterfly net and specimen jar. Pairing the title with a mouse, the smallest and most overlooked of woodland creatures, gives the painting its gentle comic charge, the entire grand tradition of natural history scaled down to fit a creature who is himself part of the very world he so diligently studies.
The mouse is dressed for serious fieldwork, wearing a soft sage green jacket with a crisp white collar and a bright red ribbon tied neatly at the throat, the kind of considered ensemble that suggests a gentleman who takes his pursuits seriously. His head is tipped attentively upward, large rounded ears alert and whiskers fanning out as he engages the viewer directly, the open pages of his field notebook still clasped in his small paws as though he might return to them at any moment. A satchel is slung over his shoulder, ready to receive whatever treasures the day's foraging might yield, and he leans casually against the cap of a woodland toadstool that serves as both resting post and field desk. His long pink tail trails out behind him across the woodland floor, lending the figure a wonderful sense of movement and presence. The setting is unmistakably that of an English wood in autumn, the ground a rich tapestry of fallen leaves, acorns and tangled undergrowth painted in deep russets, ochres and burnt umbers, while behind him the trunks of trees rise softly into a misty wash of blues, mauves and pale yellows, suggesting the dappled light of a woodland clearing.
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