Recent Blog Posts
Wed Nov 19, 4:33 PM
Wed Nov 19, 1:59 PM
Thu Nov 20, 10:22 AM
Thu Nov 20, 10:02 AM
Thu Nov 20, 8:57 AM
Wed Nov 19, 2:18 PM
Thu Nov 20, 12:03 PM
Thu Nov 20, 10:27 AM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Michael Leaverton
No related articles found
National Features >
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Do black voters need to get over their homophobia?
By Bob Norman
Riverfront Times
The American Mustache Institute works to make facial hair hip again.
By Matt Kasper
Village Voice
Welcome to America, freedom fighters. Now go home.
By Elizabeth Dwoskin
Seattle Weekly
How a Seattle man made a killing off the misery of local homeowners.
By Nina Shapiro
Look, Up in the Sky
Published on February 29, 2008 at 4:20am
When artist David Tomb traveled to Mexico to look at birds, what he saw so excited him, he came home and splashed his canvases with the creatures, resulting in his first non-portrait show in twenty years. "Treasures of the Sierra Madre -- Birds of West Mexico" features a stunning array of Mountain Pygmy-Owls, Emerald Toucanets, Great Kiskadees, Resplendent Quetzals, Blue-crowned Motmots, Ringed Kingfishers, and Barred Forest Falcons, all of them perched in trees in his large-scale works. But Tomb, showing the kind of passion we expect from our nation's birders, wasn't finished. He also installed native trees and vegetation from Flora Grubb Gardens, mounted bird specimens from the California Academy of Science, recorded birdcalls from western Mexico, and included a sound art piece by Martyn Stewart of www.naturesound.org. He's also setting aside proceeds from the sale of prints to go to El Triunfo Reserve in Sierra Madre. And still he's not finished. Today, noted bird experts sit for a panel of "all things ornithological" at the stunningly titled discussion, "Tales from the Birding Life: Poisonous Birds, the Horned Guan and the Bristle-thighed Curlew."
March 12-22, 7 p.m., 2008