fiona lumsden wildlife artist
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About the Artist:

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Fiona Lumsden grew up in the small village of Mt Wilson amidst the wilderness of the Greater Blue Mountains National Park. It was there that she began learning about the birds, animals and plants of the wild places that surrounded her. She has lived in and explored the upper Blue Mountains area ever since.

Fiona has a keen interest in birdwatching and other nature study and a great love for the Australian bush. This has led to her specialising in bird painting and other flora and fauna subjects.

The artist has been painting Australian birds for forty years now: studying their form, habits and habitat primarily on her numerous field trips throughout Australia but also in zoos, aviaries, museums and literature.

For her original paintings she uses watercolours, acrylics, pastels, inks and pencil on 100% cotton rag watercolour paper. The conservation-quality frames are individually designed by the artist for each artwork. She also sells limited-edition, archival-quality, signed Giclee prints of her works on cotton art rag paper.

Fiona is an experienced wildlife illustrator. She has illustrated 4 books to date and provided illustrations for many publications and wildlife organisations.


She has also worked in different mediums in other formats e.g. fabric painting, metal-painting, murals, glass-painting etc.

She has produced many private commissions and has sold paintings Australia-wide and internationally. She has participated in many group exhibitions, gallery displays and window art displays. She has had a number  solo exhibitions of her paintings: earlier ones at the Australian Museum, 1987, and at Hunters Hill, Sydney, 1998, and a major showing at the Blue Mountains Botanic Garden, Mt Tomah, entitled "Wollemi Wild Things", from December 2012  to January 2013.Since her initial showing at Blue Mountains Botanic in 2012, she has been doing regular annual or bi-annual themed solo art exhbitions there. Fiona wishes to pass on many thanks to the staff there for their encouragment and the opprotunity to develop her nature art and educate viewers about nature.

She conducted a Nature Drawing Workshop weekend and students' exhibition at historic Eskbank House, Lithgow in 2008 and is currently running nature art workshops at the Blue Mountains Botanic Garden inconjunction with her art exhibitions.

She is a member of the Blue Mountains Artists Connection group of mountain artists.  She has been an exhibiting member of the Botanical Art Society of Australia and also the Wildlife Artists Society of Australasia and has won the Thomas Nelson Australia Award for best drawing with WASA.


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Framed artworks on display at "Wollemi Wild Things" exhibition, Blue Mountains Botanic Garden, 2012-13.

Fiona sees her wildlife art as hopefully a link to foster greater understanding and connection with nature and the intricate wild ecosystems that sustain us. Conservation priorities become more urgent as wild places shrink or are increasingly degraded. In the time she has been birdwatching she has seen many once common bird species be reclassified as Threatened and Declining: depressingly a continuing process. She is acutely aware that extinction is indeed forever but it often doesn't have to be that way; the choice is ours to share the world. Whilst hoping that education and exposure to the beauty of nature through art, photography, literature and other media, will stimulate increasing awareness and concern for more and more people, direct action is also needed to halt the slide to extinction for many of our precious species. A long-time member of Birds Australia (now Birdlife Australia) and other conservation bodies, she still finds time between work and other commitments to participate in tree-planting, survey work and conservation-directed artwork etc. It is all growing as time goes on.

Fiona and her partner, John French, have a 100 acre bush property in the hills behind Koorawatha, near Cowra, Central NSW. It preserves a small parcel of now rare Western Slopes woodland habitat and a suite of Declining or Threatened bird species. The property has been networked into the Cowra Woodland Birds Program (Birdlife Australia) as one of their survey sites where data is collected to observe trends in woodland birds and learn more of their habitat requirements.

The "Box-Gum Grassy Woodlands" of the Western Slopes are one of the most endangered ecological communities in Australia. 80-95% of this agriculturally productive land has been cleared and what little is remaining is mostly on private property. John and Fiona have put a Voluntary Conservation Agreement with the Nature Conservation Trust of NSW on their own property: a covenant that will protect the land from degradation; whoever the future owners are. They encourage other land owners to consider protecting remaining bushland.

For further information contact:  Nature Conservation Trust of NSW:   www.nct.org.au   or  NSW Department of Environment and Heritage:  www.environment.nsw.gov.au/cpp/ConservationPartners.htm

Incidentally they are also very much enjoying their time getting to know a little bit of the Australian bush intimately. Away from it all in a rough bush shed!


Creek near Koorawatha
Creek near Koorawatha

Articles about the artist:

 BLUE MOUNTAINS LIFE MAGAZINE, OCT/NOV 2012.
Article written by Leigh Marchant       Email: leighemarchant@gmail.com


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"CONNECTED ELEMENTS "     -     OZ ARTS MAGAZINE


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A  feature article on Fiona and her artworks was published in Oz Arts Winter 2015 edition.
The article has been written by the very talented creative writer Leigh Marchant and  features a number of Fiona's artworks with a back story on their development.   Contact:  leighemarchant@gmail.com
Thanks also to Carolynne Skinner - editor of Oz Arts and a wonderful supporter of the arts and artists in the Blue Mountains and beyond.
See my news  page for a small copy of the article
For the full article on-line or to purchase copies of the magazine visit
 www.ozarts.net.au

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