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Détails
| Genre/forme : | Pictorial works |
|---|---|
| Format : | Livre |
| Tous les auteurs / collaborateurs : |
Katrina Van Grouw |
| ISBN : | 9780691151342 0691151342 |
| Numéro OCLC : | 809937387 |
| Description : | p. cm. |
| Contenu : | Acknowledgments viii A Note about Names x Introduction xii Part One: Generic The Trunk 2 The Head and Neck 8 The Hind Limbs 14 The Wings and Tail 19 Part Two: Specific I Accipitres 30 Vultures 32 Birds of Prey 35 Owls 44 II Picae 52 Parrots 54 Turacos and Others 58 Kingfishers 62 Hornbills and Allies 65 Toucans and Barbets 70 Woodpeckers 74 Hummingbirds 80 III Anseres 84 Waterfowl / Domestic Waterfowl 86 Penguins 104 Loons 114 Grebes 119 Albatrosses, Petrels, and Storm Petrels 124 Tropicbirds and Frigatebirds 132 Pelicans 136 Gannets 139 Cormorants and Darters 144 Gulls, Terns, Skimmers, and Skuas 150 Auks 154 IV Grallae 162 Flamingos 164 Herons 167 Shoebill 173 Storks, Ibises, and Spoonbills 174 Cranes 181 Rails 185 Kagu 190 Waders 192 V Gallinae 202 Gamebirds / Domestic Fowl 205 Screamers 220 Hoatzin 223 Ostrich, Kiwis, and Other Ratites 226 Tinamous 237 Bustards 239 Sandgrouse 242 Dodo and Solitaire 244 VI Passeres 248 Pigeons / Domestic Pigeons 250 Nightjars 258 Swifts 263 Passerines 266 Index 284 |
| Responsabilité : | Katrina van Grouw. |
Critiques
Synopsis de l’éditeur
Unsettling and irresistible... [The birds] are drawn and described in the text, with great skill and attention to the details--of their structure, their evolution and their lives--and with a slightly wicked sense of humor that appears often enough to lift the book beyond another compendium of bird life... This is a coffee-table book, and compelling images are enough to sell such a volume, but The Unfeathered Bird delivers on the other promise of such books, not always fulfilled, that there should be something to read... [I]f you love the natural world for its astonishments, for something as obvious but thrilling as the huge variety of shapes that birds and their parts have evolved, then The Unfeathered Bird won't disappoint. -- James Gorman New York Times Van Grouw's focus on the skeleton rather than on external appearance gives the book a special power. Van Grouw's book was 25 years in the making: surprisingly quick, considering the work involved. An international list of friends, colleagues, farmers, conservationists--and the occasional taxidermist--donated dead birds for her (and her taxidermist husband) to pluck, skin and boil down to their skeletons. And draw--exquisitely. -- Alison Abbott Nature Although her detailed drawings of bones, skeletons, muscles, and other internal tissues would not be out of place in a treatise on avian anatomy, van Grouw intends them to reveal how birds' 'appearance, posture, and behavior influence, and are influenced by, their internal structure.' Science The Unfeathered Bird is a treasure trove of 585 stunning anatomical drawings of 200 bird species in various states of undress. [Van Grouw] offers beautiful, enlightening illustrations of musculature and details of eyes, orbits, bills, ears, feet, skulls, wings, tongues, bones. Her drawings would be sufficient by themselves, but Ms. Von Grouw has also provided a thorough, accurate, and accessible text which further explains anatomical details and evolutionary relationships. There is nothing in the literature of birds or bird art that is anything like The Unfeathered Bird. Anyone who loves birds and bird art will want this volume. -- Wayne Mones Audubon Magazine The 300+ drawings--of skinned birds, their muscular and skeletal anatomy exposed in lifelike poses--are extraordinary, a sort of 2-D bird 'Body Worlds.'... [The text is] lucid, colloquial, packed with information, and leavened with humor, it brings a grasp of bird evolution and adaptation within any reader's reach... A magnificent--and accessible--monograph on biodiversity. -- Annie Gottlieb Scientist This fusion of art and science is a fascinating coffee table book that boosts that genre to another level. It invites you to browse but then catches your interest and when I intended to look through it as if waiting for the coffee to arrive I found myself slowing up to read about how the environmental niche needs skeletal variation and what makes for diving and what merely submerging. Pre-DNA taxonomy has relied on skeletal differences to reveal the phylogenetic tree so this look beneath the skin is not mere curiosity but science with a capital 'S'. On the other hand there is a beauty on the form. I've always loved scientific drawings whether of birds or botanical specimens as there is not just science in their accuracy but beauty too. -- Bo Beolens Fatbirder This coffee-table book would make a good gift for someone with an interest in bird or anatomy art. -- Ian Paulsen Birdbooker Report Gives us genuinely new insights into the behaviour of living species. -- Stephen Moss Guardian Katrina van Grouw's new book The Unfeathered Bird from Princeton University Press is likely to be one of the most desired books on gift lists this holiday season. This exquisitely illustrated study of bird anatomy is captivating in both its insight and its originality of illustration from the very first page. -- John Riutta Well-Read Naturalist [H]ere is a book with a wide appeal, a book which deserves to be studied by birders with a scientific and/or artistic bent, ornithologists, bird artists, bird photographers, biologists, natural historians, and artists of all persuasions. The author states that the original intention was a book aimed at artists and it was only during the early stages that she realized it could have wider appeal. In my opinion it was a realization which has come to fruition in a beautifully crafted, scholarly and ultimately fine book ... -- Phil Slade Another Bird Blog Haunting, stunning, a schooling for any other scientific illustrator out there. Illustrations that go beneath the feathered surface of birds and explore how their internal anatomy functions in different settings--one impressively underwater--is a scientific feat in itself. Truly challenges the idea that art is separate from scientific inquiry. Discover Magazine I challenge any reader to walk away from this book without being blown away by the remarkable and diverse nature of birds. Just when you think you have seen every trick Avian Anatomy has to throw at you, you turn the page and are greeted by the windpipe of Phonygammus keraudrenii (the Trumpet Manucode) or the tongue of Picus viridis (the Green Woodpecker). -- Samuel Barnett Palaeosam's Blog Turning each page [is] an adventure. Particularly welcome is the large size with which many images are so boldly presented... It's early in the year, but I doubt if 2013 will see a book published that is more interesting or fascinating or better done than Ms. van Grouw's. It is $49.95, worth every penny, a world-wide birding expedition like no other. -- Jim Williams, WingNut Minneapolis Star Tribune A work of passion... [Katrina van Grouw] has used her experience in ornithology and taxidermy to draw, over the course of her career, 385 beautiful illustrations of birds--all, as the book's title suggests, without their feathers. Her work shows the skeletal and muscular systems of 200 different species, from ostriches to hummingbirds, parrots to penguins, in life-like poses. -- Megan Gambino Smithsonian Magazine Part of the strength of this anatomical extravaganza is its breadth, spanning the entire range of birds from primping parrots to posturing penguins, all in lifelike poses. Every image is arresting, but several--like the great cormorant, grey heron and rook--are so vibrant that they seem to fly off the page. -- Tim Birkhead BBC Wildlife Magazine [A] remarkable blend of science and art, informative and factual but at the same time an expression of the beauty and wonder of life. y Stoddart Katrina van Grouw's book The Unfeathered Bird is a unique wonder that has joined the bird book firmament and as soon as I saw it I recognized it to be a monumental achievement. -- Ceri Levy Caught by the River If you are a birder with an interest in how birds do what they do, this is an excellent book... This would also make a great gift for a birding friend who seems to have every bird book in print. -- Penny Miller A Charm of Finches While it's tempting to say that The Unfeathered Bird reduces birding to its bare bones, and, indeed it is full of detailed drawings of the skeletal structures of birds as well as the musculature and other layers normally obscured by feathers, van Grouw does not give us just a bare bones look at birds. She fleshes out and feathers a wide variety of bird species with rich detail of their behavior, anatomy, and evolutionary adaptations. -- Brad Sylvester Examiner Van Grouw's text describing what she's showing in the artwork is equally wonderful and enlightening. The Unfeathered Bird reveals things about birds that you may never have imagined, like the coiled wind-pipe of the Trumpet Manucode. Amazing! -- Robert Mortensen Birding is Fun! An illuminating and meticulously illustrated look at the brilliance of birds at the intersection of art, science and history, covering such intricate mysteries as how the ostrich lost two of its four toes and why the vulture diverged into radically different Old World and New World varieties... Meticulously researched, gloriously illustrated, and absorbingly narrated, The Unfeathered Bird lives at the heart of that timeless temple where art and science meet to enrich one another with 'systematic wonder.' -- Maria Popova Brain Pickings This is a book that everyone interested in birds should own and in particular, every bird painter, sculptor, and carver should be required to have this book and study it well. Overall the level of detail in the text is well matched with the artwork resulting in a comprehensive whole that I think meets the authors goal of making this book a well done 'convergence of art and science; accessibility and erudition; old and new--without compromise and without apology.' -- John Carlson Prairie Ice The Unfeathered Bird is visually arresting and utterly unique. But I had been expecting that. What really surprised me is how much I loved reading it. It's fascinating, relevant, and will deepen your appreciation for these amazing creatures. -- Grant McCreary Birder's Library A one-of-a-kind book... This book is like a marriage of a technical ornithology book and an artist's portfolio but even better because the text reads in an entertaining fashion for anyone that is interested in birds. -- Eva Matthews Flying Mullet In a world where traditional science illustration is dying and being replaced by digital and other technologies, it's nice to see someone who has not succumbed--who still uses pencils and paintbrushes to create illustrations that are not only informative, but rise to the level of fine art... The Unfeathered Bird deserves its place in the center of the coffee table: not only a must-have for the libraries of science artists, but as a classic for all lovers of natural history. -- Christopher Sloan Science Visualization Van Grouw's lifelong experience as fine artist and as a bird curator at the Natural History Museum, taxidermist and ringer have stood her in good stead in creating this hybrid marvel of history, art and ornithology. It is also readable, rather than filled with off-putting scientific terminology... This acts as both a fine reference and an expert artist's portfolio. It is an original work by a prodigiously talented bird artist... It deserves to be widely admired. -- David Callahan Birdwatch This magnificent volume will not only delight your eyes, it will change the way you see the natural world. -- Bruce Fellman Naturalist's Journal, Standard-Times A text spiked with quirky humour and replete with arcane bird lore and nuggets of natural history... Monumentally impressive, 25 years in the making, The Unfeathered Bird is simply superb. -- Adrian Barnett New Scientist [A] seductive guide to birds and their bodies. -- Rob Innes Cage & Aviary Birds Remarkable, beautiful, unexpected, and you will never almost certainly have seen anything like it before. I've been fascinated by birds for most of my life, but after reading The Unfeathered Bird I'm looking at them in a slightly different way, seeing more than I did before, and I'm pretty sure that anyone--birder or non-birder--will react in much the same way. So get one for a friend too ... -- Charlie Moores Talking Naturally The book is a precious thing that any fan of birds, especially scientists, really needs to have a hard copy of. While it claims not to be an anatomy text, its illustrations provide ample opportunities to use it for that purpose. But really the point of owning all 287-plus pages is to bask in the warmth of true, pure appreciation for classic ornithology, which I found infectious. It is a book by and for bird lovers, but also for those that find the interface of art and science to be fascinating. -- John Hutchinson What's in John's Freezer [A] rewarding read, giving you a unique perspective on species that you thought you knew well. -- Matt Merritt Birdwatching Magazine The Unfeathered Bird makes for a solid addition to a birder's library as well as an attractive coffee table centerpiece. Unlike the photo mosaics that frequently inhabit such furniture, van Grouw's work may spark more than passing conversation as your guests explore the inner world of birds. -- Steve Shultz Carolina Bird Club Newsletter A world of skeletal pleasure. -- Donna Schulman ABA Blog [Van Grouw] appraised her subjects through trained, perceptive eyes, subjected them to the workings of a selective, imaginative brain, and then let her interpretations flow out through her pencil. The results are minor miracles: A Great Spotted Woodpecker, skinless and featherless except for its long tail, braces against a tree trunk. A European Robin, with worm but sans skin, crouches on the handle of a spade. A skeletal European Nightjar hawks insects in mid-air. Each is an avian Lazarus, returned to life after consignment to the specimen drawer. BirdWatching Magazine Superb... Ranging from ratites to tanagers, van Grouw's illustrations and accompanying explanations cut through the usual scientific jargon common to anatomy books and make the form and function of her subjects' bodies easily intelligible. -- John Riutta Bird Watcher's Digest All in all, this is a fascinating book, with masses of detailed description of birds' structure, and the author relates this to their function and ultimately ecology. -- David Parkin British Birds The illustrations are the undoubted highlight of the book, but the text is not to be overlooked. It is fluently written and I think happily achieves its aim of being accessible to the general reader... [T]his is overall an impressive book. It is also unusual, deeply individual and probably best enjoyed on its own terms--there is, after all, nothing else quite like it around. -- Joanne Cooper Ibis I cannot help but draw some comparison with Leonardo da Vinci when it comes to Van Grouw's amazing observational skills. -- Jean Wilson Biologist Lire la suite...

