What he was doing, particularly at the time he started doing it, was pretty radical,” says Matt Distel, the exhibitions director at The Carnegie, a gallery in Cincinnati, about American artist Charley Harper. “If you put him in the wildlife art tradition, he’s absolutely insane.”
Charley Harper’s career spans six decades, beginning in the late 1940s, and includes, at a best guess, 5,500 original works. Ladybirds, rabbits, otters, koalas, mice, elephants, hermit crabs, spiders, zebras - and just about every species of bird populate this sprawling oeuvre. To see the natural world through Harper’s eyes is to revel in the purity of colour, form and balance. He’s thinking about form and shape, and animating with minimal detail, to bring creatures to life.
For many years, Cincinnati-based Harper was not well…
