Superficially the paintings describe the rare Birdwing,
or Ornithoptera, butterflies of tropical New Guinea. but, as most of
them fly above the treetops, I am really concerned to paint the canopy
of the forest on which they depend. For me the leaf structures, patterning,
colour and surface quality are of the greatest importance.
For the past thirty years I have been interested in plant
structures and growth patterns and recently spent a fair bit of time
studying and photographing tropical plants and leaves in Borneo and Malaysia.
I have occasionally painted from photographs but I prefer to design imagined
leaf structures knowing that somewhere in the jungle canopy there is
probably a tree that looks like my invention. I have only once tried
to paint the Aristolocia vines on which the ornithoptera caterpillars
feed.
I paint with acrylic on 1/8 inch birch ply. With some
works I include pieces of local wood, with others pieces of recycled
tropical hardwoods. My intention is to ask,“ When, under what circumstances,
and for what purposes should tropical and temperate woods be used?”
At present I am completing 4 different series each depicting
the 11 recognized species, and some subspecies, of Ornithoptera Butterflies.
Ornithoptera Croesus
The male of this butterfly is unique of the ornithoptera
butterflies being mostly brown and a burnt orange, which appears iridescent
green from certain views.
Alfred Russell Wallace first observed it in 1859 and
it took him three months before he finally collected a specimen. He discovered
that they are attracted to the yellow flowering shrub ‘Mussaenda’,
so stood guard with his net till a male came along. He named it after
the fabulously rich Lydian King Croesus, of the sixth century B.C.
There are considered to be 5 subspecies.
The males have a wingspan of up to 15 cm.
The females have a wingspan of up to 22 cm.
These butterflies frequent lowland swamps on various
islands in the Moluccas. It is classified as Vulnerable in the ‘Red
Data Book of Threatened Swallowtail Butterflies of the World’