Artwork Description

Acrylic on paper, ready to hang.

Signed on the front.

This artwork comes with an external frame

If you spend a lot of time in the bush, you might be lucky enough to see albino macropods. It sure makes you stop in your tracks! I have seen several in the wild but this wallaby was photographed at the Dubbo zoo where rare and endangered species are protected in captivity. I have placed it in an imagined environment but one it surely will be found in because wallabies are common throughout Australia. This painting is an example of the painting series ‘outback’ that can be viewed on my website: www.pamschultzgallery.com
Unlike watercolour, Acrylic painted on Arches paper provides the artist with different ways of applying the paint, including impasto and watercolour techniques. I believe the archival life is just as good as with watercolour.

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Medium

Acrylic on Arches Paper, framed & behind glass, ready to hang

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Framed and ready to hang

This artwork is currently framed and ready to hang.

It comes with an external frame.

Framed dimensions - 44.0(W) x 33.0(H).

Artwork dimensions - 24.0(W) x 18.0(H).

#Albino, #wallaby, #outback, #grass trees, #white, #bushy, #Australiana, #macropod

All art by Pam Schultz

Mawson Bay beach is a part of the Tarkine wilderness area, NW Coast Tasmania. It is recognised as having National Heritage values. Aptly named, the wide stretches of beach and sand dunes reminds me of Mawson’s historical and desolate trek through the Antarctic in the year 1912. Indeed, the wild ocean stretches all the way to Argentina. There are no dogs on this beach, just sand, birds, seaweed, cuttlefish, rocks. ochre and creek estuaries. When one walks this desolated beach, they might feel they are drifting along unchartered territory just like Mawson in the Antarctica. Deep Sea corals are up to 6 klms below the surface of the ocean. The colours are striking but only deep sea submarines can access this underwater wonderland.The painting has swirls and patterns of gold and black. The edges are painted with a pattern.Gerry Turpin is an Mbarbaram man working as an ethnobotanist with his own and many other Communities in Cape York Peninsula, Queensland and beyond.
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