词条 | William T. Cooper |
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| name = William T. Cooper | honorific_suffix = AO | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | birth_name = William Thomas Cooper | birth_date = {{Birth date|1934|04|06|df=yes}} | birth_place = Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia | death_date = {{Death date and age|2015|05|10|1934|04|06|df=yes}} | death_place = Malanda, Queensland, Australia | nationality = | education = Newcastle Boys' High School | alma_mater = | occupation = Artist, Ornithologist | years_active = 1964–2015 | known_for = Internationally acclaimed bird artist who paints birds and wildlife in Australia and Papua New Guinea | spouses = 1) Marie MacEnearney 2) Wendy Elizabeth Price | children = Daryl Cooper | awards = AO (1994) Gold Medal of the Academy of Natural Sciences (USA) for distinction in natural history art 1992 | website = {{URL|www.williamtcooper.com.au}} | footnotes = Encyclopedia of Australian Science,[1][2] Who's Who Australia[3] | box_width = }} William Thomas Cooper AO (6 April 1934 – 10 May 2015) was an Australian artist. William was born in Adamstown NSW Australia to Coral Bird and William Cooper. He had one brother, Buddy Cooper. He trained originally as a landscape and seascape artist but achieved renown through natural history scientific illustrations, especially of birds. Cooper also became a qualified taxidermist in his teenage years. LifeThe first book for which Cooper supplied the pictures was Portfolio of Australian Birds, written by Keith Hindwood in 1967. Later, he illustrated Parrots of the World, Birds of Paradise and Bowerbirds, Australian Parrots, Kingfishers and Related Birds, The Cockatoos (a Portfolio of all Species), and Turacos (a Portfolio of all Species) all authored by Joseph Forshaw. In 1992 the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, presented Cooper with its gold medal for "artistic endeavors and life's work which have contributed to mankind's better understanding and appreciation of living things". He was the first Australian recipient in the academy's 190-year history. Then, in 1994, Cooper was awarded the Order of Australia (AO) for his contribution to art and natural history.[4] Cooper’s work is held in many collections and institutions around the world, including the National Library of Australia. Papua New Guinea's government purchased entire collections of his published works and commissioned from him two sets of postage stamps. He also illustrated Visions of a Rainforest by Stanley Breeden and Fruits of the Australian Tropical Rainforest by Wendy Cooper. In 2011 he wrote and illustrated Capturing the Essence, a book that illustrates and describes techniques for artists. The hard-won knowledge of his subjects which Cooper acquired is evident in his paintings, which display extreme precision, and he usually insisted on painting the birds in their distinct natural environments, down to the exact foods they eat. Preferring to draw from life, rather than depending on photographs as the main source of material for his work, he would often venture into wild, untamed parts of the world to capture the exact display of the birds he painted. He lived with his wife, Wendy Cooper, a self-taught botanist who has authored two substantial books, in north Queensland where his studio was surrounded by tropical rainforest. Sir David Attenborough described Cooper as "Australia's greatest living scientific painter of birds; he is possibly the best in the world". In 1993 Sir David made a film about Cooper, called Portrait Painter to the Birds. A biography, An Eye For Nature — The Life and Art of William T. Cooper, written by Penny Olsen and published by The National Library of Australia, was launched in February 2014. William Cooper was married twice, 1) Marie MacEnearney 2) Wendy Elizabeth Price. Cooper died at his home in Malanda, Queensland, on 10 May 2015.[5] Illustrated Art worksBooks illustrated by Cooper include:
Books illustrated & written by Cooper include:
Awards
References1. ^{{cite web |url = http://trove.nla.gov.au/people/459267?c=people |title = Cooper, William T., 1934- |work = Trove. Catalogue. (database online) |publisher = National Library of Australia }} 2. ^{{cite web|last=Walker|first=Rosanne|title=Biographical entry Cooper, William Thomas (1934 - )|url=http://www.eoas.info/biogs/P003128b.htm|work=Encyclopedia of Australian Science|accessdate=27 July 2011|date=31 January 2001}} Last modified: 24 May 2006 3. ^{{cite web|title=Who's Who Live (Australia)|url=http://0-live.crowncontent.com.au/whoswho/static/ww-intro.jsp|publisher=Crown Content ABN 37 096 393 636|accessdate=29 June 2011}} 4. ^It's an Honour. Retrieved 11 May 2015 5. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-05-12/queensland-bird-illustrator-william-cooper-dies-at-home/6462116|title=Bird illustrator William Cooper dies at home in far north Queensland - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)|last=Sexton-McGrath|first=Kristy|date=12 May 2015|work=ABC Online|publisher=Australian Broadcast Corporation|language=English|accessdate=12 May 2015}} External links
7 : 1934 births|2015 deaths|Australian illustrators|Australian bird artists|Australian ornithologists|People educated at Newcastle Boys' High School|Officers of the Order of Australia |
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