By Todd Wilkinson
Tim Shinabarger is too modest, too soft spoken to ever put
together a biography for his own web page, so as a writer who has penned several magazine
stories about his work over the years, allow me to provide an introduction.
To use a professional sports metaphor, Shinabarger is what
you might call a potent double threat. He's an award-winning sculptor, as well as a gifted
oil painter, and his explorations in both mediums have transformed him into one of the
exceptional talents of his generation.
I love to experience raw nature, I live for it," he
says. Whenever I feel as if I've been trapped in civilization for too long, I can't wait
to touch the wilderness, taste it and smell it. When I'm in the backcountry gathering
material for a new piece, this is how I empower myself to say something
artistically."
Shinabarger's wildlife studies and monumental celebrations of
big game animals have earned him honors and recognition from the National Sculpture
Society, the Society of Animal Artists, and several prominent museums, distinctions rare
for someone so young. Most recently in 2001, he was the recipient of the C. Percival
Dietsch Award from the National Sculpture Society. He has also received the Louis
Bennett Prize from the National Sculpture Society, the Elliot Liskin Award form the
Society of Animal Artists, and the Tuffy Berg Memorial Award from the C.M. Russell Museum.
In order to convey the essence of his elusive subjects,
Shinabarger says it is necessary to put himself in a position to directly observe them in
the wild.
Following in the footsteps of such pathfinders as Carl
Rungius, Belmore Brown, Bob Kuhn, and Ken Bunn, Shinabarger makes regular pilgrimages into
the wilderness to gather ideas for new material.
Like Rungius, Shinabarger has extensive knowledge of animal
behavior and a talent for conveying the personality of a subject, "neither of which
can be learned in the studio alone," notes William Kerr, a trustee of the
National Museum of Wildlife Art in an article on Shinabarger which appeared
in Southwest Art Magazine.
Indeed, be it the Brooks Range in remotest Alaska where
he has spent weeks trailing Grizzly bears and migrating caribou; the Wrangle Range
where he's ascended the rugged crags in search of Dall Sheep; the red rock canyons of Utah
where he's plied the shadows in search of mule deer; or the vast greater Yellowstone
ecosystem in his own backyard, where he's ambled after moose and majestic wapiti,
Shinabarger's wanderings are tireless. In turn, his bronzes are timeless.
"Tim is one of the bright stars and he's creating
wonderful things," sculptor Ken Bunn says. "He is doing something that a heck of
a lot of guys don't do: He's living the experience of the outdoors that all of us are
drawn to, and he's putting it into his work."
Tim invites you to return to this web site to accompany him
on recent adventures in Alaska and Canada which are the inspiration behind several new
pieces coming out of his studio. For those who want to see his work firsthand, Tim is
represented by Legacy Galleries in Jackson Hole, Wyoming and Scottsdale, Arizona, J.N.
Bartfield Gallery in New York City, New York, Collector's Covey in Dallas, Texas, DeMott
Gallery in Vail, Colorado, Coeur d' Alene Galleries in Coeur d' Alene, Idaho, Thomas
Nygard Gallery in Bozeman, Montana, and Ponderosa Art Gallery in Hamilton, Montana. |