
Spencer Hodge
Eye of the Tiger
When discussing this powerful image of a Bengali tiger, Spencer Hodge states:
"I think many people would choose the tiger as best representing power and beauty; yet we are watching as it fades away from our planet". "Extinction in the wild is quite probable in the next ten to twenty years at present rates of poaching." The Bengali is one of the many Tiger subspecies and is found principally in the rainforests of India. It has narrower and darker stripes than those of the South China Tiger and is now one of the most endangered species in the world, with only around 5000 believed to survive in the wild.
Spencer Hodge was born in 1943, and attended the Hastings School of Art and Royal West of England Academy. After a formal and academic art training he spent six years illustrating books and teaching material for the Medical Research Council. The dissection and drawing of the human body which this work involved gave him a profound understanding of the mechanics and structure of form.
After leaving England, Spencer Hodge travelled widely, undertaking long field trips for international conservation organisations such as the World Wide Fund for Nature. He journeyed to places such as India, West Africa, the United Arab Emirates and, particularly, the game rich areas of Tanzania and Kenya.
Many of these trips culminated in successful exhibitions to raise funds for specific conservation projects including, for example, a Bahamas National Trust exhibition under the patronage of, and opened by, HRH the Duke of Edinburgh which targeted the rare Bahamian Parrot.
Spencer Hodge has acquired a reputation as one of the finest wildlife artists this century, and he counts HRH The Duke of Edinburgh and HSH Prince Rainier amongst his many admirers. His work is exhibited by leading galleries throughout Europe and America and over 40 of his limited edition prints have now been published.
Spencer Hodge’s passion for nature and wildlife has proved to be an inexhaustible source of inspiration throughout his career. The many hundreds of hours spent studying wild animals and birds in their natural habitat are truly reflected in the precision and realism of his dramatic work.
A Limited Edition Print of 850 individually hand-numbered copies, each of which is signed by the artist.
Image size - 21x34 ins / 53x86 cm
Paper size - 27x39 ins / 68x99 cms
Image copyright Felix Rosenstiel's Widow & Son.
| Limited edition print: £85.00 |  |
|---|