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Eldridge Hardie
'Evening Flats' |
For the
sportsman art collector who is deeply enriched by his days in the field or
on the water, authenticity of mood and action in a painting are crucial.
The quarry, the texture of the landscape, the weather, light, and season,
the people and dogs, the boats all are familiar and treasured elements.
Eldridge Hardie's own bird hunting and fly fishing pursuits, which have
taken him from Canada to the Caribbean, the southernmost tip of South
America, Scotland and all across this country, are joined with his
artistic ability to make sporting moments live in his pictures. That he is
at the top of his profession is acknowledged by a long list of honors.
In a Gray's Sporting Journal review of the book The Paintings of
Eldridge Hardie—Art of a Life in Sport, Christopher Camuto calls the
artist "as good as any painter alive in depicting not only the beauty of
nature but also the subtle psychological tug in any fishing or hunting
scene. "Eldridge Hardie gets it," he says.
Hardie was born in 1940 on a
small ranch near Boerne, Texas. In 1964 he graduated first in his class
with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the School of Fine Art at
Washington University in Saint Louis. He has made Denver his home since
1968.
In February 2000 The National Bird Dog Museum honored Hardie with its
first ever one-man retrospective show titled The Art of Eldridge Hardie-A
Celebration of the Sporting Tradition. Also, The National Museum of
Wildlife Art, the Gilcrease Museum, the American Museum of Fly Fishing,
and the Artists of America Show have included Hardie's work in
invitational exhibits. He was the inaugural Trout Unlimited Artist of the
Year in 1978 and was named the Atlantic Salmon Federation Artist of the
Year in 1994. Ducks Unlimited and the National Wild Turkey Federation have
commissioned Hardie to produce limited edition prints for their
fund-raising art, and five of his designs have been chosen for the Texas
Upland Bird, Wild Turkey and Quail Stamps. His work has appeared
frequently in Shooting Sportsman, Gray's Sporting Journal, Fly Fishing in
Salt Waters, Double Gun Journal, Sporting Classics, and Pointing Dog
Journal. His career has been profiled in Wildlife Art News, and Southwest
Art. He has illustrated more than fifteen books, among them, José Ortega y
Gasset's classic Meditations on Hunting and Michael McIntosh's Shotguns &
Shooting, and he has painted covers for two Roderick Haig-Brown books.
Eldridge Hardie carries on the special heritage of artists Winslow Homer,
A. B. Frost, Ogden Pleissner, Frank Benson, and A. Lassell Ripley, who
intimately knew outdoor sport.
Eldridge Hardie sums up his long career by saying, "I was born to hunt,
fish, and make art about these passions." |