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Terry Miller

Hometown: Takoma Park , MD

Terry has been a professional artist for 25 years and has been participating in the Festival almost as long. Working solely in graphite, he enjoys portraying the world around him in shades of grey, recounting and depicting personal experiences “in the field.”  Having traveled to Africa many times, as well as crisscrossing the U.S. for over forty years, he now takes pleasure in spotlighting the mundane and the overlooked aspects of everyday life in rural and suburban Maryland with a focus on animals, nature and, most recently, the human interaction with both.

Susan deLearie Adair

Hometown: Schenectady, NY

Sue’s artwork is inspired by her love of the natural world: close to her home in Upstate New York and from far afield. A birder for over 30 years, Sue is an avid naturalist who draws her inspiration and reference material directly from observations made in nature. She features detailed subjects with simple, sometimes even stylized, backgrounds. Sue draws in various combinations of graphite, colored pencil and watercolor. Sue’s work has been juried into a number of national and international exhibits including Birds in Art (Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum) and Art and the Animal (Society of Animal Artists). Her work has also been selected for publication in five of the “Strokes of Genius” best of drawing books published by North Light Books. Sue is a signature member of the Society of Animal Artists and the Colored Pencil Society of America. Her work can be seen at galleries in Jackson, WY, Tulsa, OK and Nags Head, NC.

Bruce Woodward

Hometown: Sykesville, MD

Bruce Woodward, a native of central Maryland, grew up amidst peaceful, rural surroundings that have provided the influence for much of his watercolor and acrylic landscape paintings. Favored pastimes of fly-fishing, hiking, and camping have afforded him first-hand opportunities to experience the Mid-Atlantic geographical diversity from mountains to shore and to closely observe wildlife within these bounds. Many paintings are conceived of personal observations of the rural landscapes and wildlife of the Appalachian Mountains, Chesapeake Bay region, and Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

 

Much of Mr. Woodward’s work pays homage to the legacies of disappearing landscapes and ways of life. Capturing the landscapes of our agrarian roots has been a centerpiece of his work as he preserves these images of a passing way of American life. Similarly, much of his work also records a fleeting way of life from the Chesapeake Bay region, that of the watermen, their workboats, and the marshes and waterways they call home.

 

Increasingly, Bruce’s most recent works reflect his longtime interest in the spirit of fly-fishing and its intimacy with the natural world. His direct experiences on regional streams and rivers during fly-fishing trips lend authenticity and atmosphere to finished works, which celebrate the sport in its truest form.

 

Bruce holds degrees in art from Towson State University and the Maryland Institute College of Art. He is represented by the The William Ris Gallery, Jamestown, New York and the LuEv Gallery, Easton, Maryland. He also brings his unique perspective and style to commissioned pieces of work, collaboratively designing images of meaning to individuals within a particular setting.

 

Mr. Woodward is a signature member of the Baltimore Watercolor Society and counts among his other achievements: First Place, Maryland Ducks Unlimited Sponsor Print Competition; Maryland Ducks Unlimited Artist of the Year; First Place, Grand National Waterfowl Hunt and Artists’ Invitational; First Place, Maryland Trout Stamp Competition. He has participated in numerous group and one-person shows, including one-man shows of his work at the National Institutes of Health and the National Wildlife Federation Headquarters Gallery in Vienna, Virginia. Group shows in which he has participated include the Easton Waterfowl Festival, Ward Foundation Show, Life of Maryland Wildlife Show, and the Baltimore Museum of Art, Teachers of Art Exhibition.

 

Other honors have included being commissioned to design the kestrel logo used by the National Audubon Society, Maryland Chapter, and invitations to many prestigious regional art shows. Bruce has donated his artwork to various local and national conservation organizations and has twice been awarded the Ducks Unlimited Conservation Award.

 

Maintaining his Cedar Run Studio in a rural setting of Southern Carroll County on the edge of Piney Run Lake offers him opportunities to see and interpret natural settings on a daily basis. Short trips by car or on foot place him in close touch with many of the other settings shaping his work.

Tom Ahern

Hometown: Bethlehem, PA

2021 Master Carver

Tom has been carving for almost fifty years and as a full time professional since 1982. Tom’s mission is to bring the feel of the outdoors into the home or office. He is known for the diversified presentation of his work, using interesting and unusual weathered natural woods along with figured hardwoods, finished rustically or matched to the colors and textures of his finished carvings. Tom is self taught and has used the experience of conquering challenges to perfect his understanding of the dynamics of specific behaviors of birds so that he can bring lifelike qualities to his work.

 

Ahern grew up on the eastern fringe of Pennsylvania Dutch country, just north of Allentown, PA, where he attended a one room schoolhouse for the elementary grades. After high school, he tried business school for a short time and then joined the service and became a paratrooper. After discharge, he found joy in woodworking and started making furniture for both his own use and for sale. He also started a “real job” at Bethlehem Steel.

 

After some encouragement from his parents, who loved vacationing on the eastern shore of Maryland, Tom started carving miniature decoys. For a few years, he gave these birds to family members as gifts and then one Christmas season, he needed some extra cash, so he took a few birds to work. He sold everything that he had available and took orders for more. This success planted a seed in his mind. He hoped that someday he would be able to support himself by carving full time.

Chip

Carol Heiman-Greene

Hometown: Orange, CA

Carol began drawing as a child, and her formal art training started in college. She earned her bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Cal State Long Beach, and her love of nature drew her to the world of wildlife art. Her style is a delicate blend of color and detail, with an emphasis on the emotion and character of her subjects.

 

For her subject matter, Carol focuses mostly on the animals of North America. “This is my home and my experience. We have beautiful wild places here in our country that we need to respect and preserve.”

 

Recent Exhibitions: 

  • San Bernardino Wildlife Art Festival, 1997 – 2012 * featured artist 2003
  • Southeastern Wildlife Exposition, Charleston, SC 2002 – 2113
  • Waterfowl Festival, Easton, MD 2004-2013
  • Miniature Painters, Sculptors & Gravers Society of Washington DC, 2010
  • Miniature Art Society of Florida, 2006 – 2012 * first place, birds and animals 2012
  • Reflections of Nature, Fallbrook, CA 1997 – 1999, 2005 – 2012
  • San Dimas Wildlife Art Festival, 2003 – 2012
  • San Dimas Festival of Western Arts, 2005 – 2011
  • California Open, San Diego, CA, 1999 – 2001 * featured artist 2001
  • La Quinta Arts Festival, 2000 – 2008, 2011
  • Southwest Arts Festival, Indio, CA 2004 – 2011
  • Art-a-Fair Festival, 1996 – 2011
  • Moonridge Animal Park solo exhibition, Big Bear Lake, 1997 – 2003
  • Pacific Rim Art Expo, Seattle, WA, 1999 – 2000

 

Published: 

  • Best Of Wildlife Art 2, Northlight Books
  • Art Of The American West, Rockport Publishers

Keith Whitelock

Hometown: Salisbury, MD

C. Keith Whitelock is a native of Somerset County Maryland, and the waterfront scenes there inspired a lifelong interest in painting watercolors and oils that document the workboats, watermen, and landscapes of the Chesapeake region. With a degree in Art Education from the University of Maryland, Keith has been a public school Art teacher, a professional graphic-artist, and draftsman. For the past 40 years he has pursued a full time career as a studio painter of his cherished Eastern Shore scenes.

 

His works have been featured in many area and regional shows winning a number of awards. He has been artist of the year for many local chapters of Ducks Unlimited and a State Sponsor Artist. He has been featured in Pace Magazine (Piedmont Airlines), Delmarva Heartland, and many other area publications including the book ìA Gallery of Marine Artî (Rockport Publishers, 1998). The prestigious Waterfowl Festival in Easton, MD has included Keith as a painting exhibitor for 37 consecutive years. He has also participated in numerous American Society of Marine Artists (ASMA) national and regional exhibits. The St. Michaels Maritime Museum hosts a watercolor depicting a working skipjack is part of their permanent collection.

 

In 1986 Keith was honored to be selected as a member of a Rotary Int. sponsored Group Study Exchange team that represented MD and DE for a six week tour of Southern England.  His paintings are found in Baltimore, Annapolis, and many Eastern Shore galleries. He is an active crew member on the retired skipjack Ida May of Chance, MD. gathering firsthand experience with his subject matter.

 

He has taught workshops for Art Leagues, Elder Hostel and other groups. He also hosts and produces a YouTube channel series “Watercolor Workshop” where one can see real-time demonstrations from pencil sketch, to a finished watercolor painting.

Rebekah Knight

Hometown: Appleton City, MO

My pastime began to develop into a career when I was 15 after winning the 2006 Federal Junior Duck Stamp contest with a painting of a redhead duck. I have since been involved in various conservation art competitions and programs and have realized the importance of conservation and awareness for wildlife, and the light that art can bring to the earth’s wild treasures. I learned to paint in acrylics but later moved to oils. I have spent many days in the field from Alaska to Africa photographing each subject of my art, which is a key part of knowing how to convey their character. I look forward to setting my sights on more goals surrounding wildlife, art and conservation.

Jim Rataczak

Home State: Minnesota

Degrees in biology and animal behavior from the University of Notre Dame and the University of Michigan underpin the scientific accuracy of Jim’s paintings, and have taught him of the connectedness of all living things.  But throughout his life, the natural world has been his real teacher.  An avid birder and naturalist, Jim regularly works directly from life, in the field, and makes hundreds of field sketches and paintings every year.  The cumulative knowledge he gains in doings so infuses his studio work with authenticity, passion and truth.

 

Jim has been a professional artist for over 20 years, winning numerous awards and exhibiting in Canada and across the United States.  His paintings have appeared in Delta WaterfowlUpland AlmanacAmerican WaterfowlerThe New York Times, and in books published by Ducks Unlimited.

Ross Smoker

Hometown: Selinsgrove, PA

Been fortunate to have  grown up in a carving family – learning from my father Richard B. And my brother Rich W., I have been carving for most of my life.
Started making gunning decoys for my own rig, then rigs of other hunters..
Now I enjoy carving all birds.  Have had good fortune to have done well in several competitions and really enjoy judging decoy contest. I have been teaching carving at the Ward Worlds , my home shop and lately been teaming up with my brother to teach. At this point in my carving career I can’t believe what blessing this  art form has had on my life.

Al Barker

Hometown: Bordentown, NJ

Al Barker has been a full-time professional artist for more than forty years. Nature has long been the focus of Al Barker’s artwork and the majority of his paintings depict scenes of tidal marshes and river estuaries that are characteristic of New Jersey, Connecticut and Maryland’s Eastern shore. He has been a continuous exhibitor at the prestigious Easton Waterfowl Festival from its inception in 1970. His work is in numerous public and private collections including the White House Collection in Washington, DC.

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