Terry Woodall
Author, Illustrator | North Bend, OR, USA |
Website
Terry Woodall is an accomplished writer on nature and nature art whose articles have appeared in Artists for Conservation online, Wildlife Art Journal webzine, the former Wildlife Art Magazine, the Society of Animal Artists newsletter, and his own art and travels blog, one of which was also published by a Stan.... more
Terry Woodall is an accomplished writer on nature and nature art whose articles have appeared in Artists for Conservation online, Wildlife Art Journal webzine, the former Wildlife Art Magazine, the Society of Animal Artists newsletter, and his own art and travels blog, one of which was also published by a Stanford University blog site. He is a member of the Society of Animal Artists and the Artists for Conservation Foundation.
Woodall was awarded an Artists for Conservation Flag Expedition Fellowship, which gave him the opportunity for an artistic field study to Lake Baikal, Russia. From the experiences of this Flag Expedition, Woodall wrote and illustrated a comprehensive leather-bound journal covering his Siberian adventure for the benefit of the AFC Foundation. His one-person art show at the Nature Museum, Irkutsk, Russia exhibited many of his myrtlewood marine art creations, specifically seal renditions.
Of note are his lectures on the freshwater Baikal Seals and sculpture demonstrations at the Art of Conservation exhibitions in Vancouver, B.C., Canada, and the AFC art exhibition at the Hiram Blauvelt Art Museum, Oradell, New Jersey. He has also exhibited his art work at the Mall Galleries, London, where he was a finalist for the David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation’s tenth annual Wildlife Artist of the Year Award, and exhibited numerous times with the Society of Animal Artists, the Artists for Conservation, and the Coos Art Museum’s Maritime Art Exhibits. His work was selected for the “Endangered Species, Flora and Fauna in Peril” art exhibition and national tour sponsored by the Wildling Art Museum, Los Olivios, CA, which included a showing at The Department of Interior Museum, Washington, D.C.