Sunday, March 18, 2012

Charles Knight Book

My illustration of the tyrannosaurid Teratophoneus taking down a Gryposaurus appears in the issue of Scientific American that's on the newsstands now.


One of the inspirations for the painting was this 1897 painting of Laelaps by Charles Knight (1874-1953). Knight was one of the founding figures of paleoart, working more than a century ago.

He started out by drawing living animals at the zoo, then studied animal anatomy and worked at the American Museum of Natural History. Despite obstacles like vision problems, he went on to paint many murals and illustrations reconstructing extinct life forms. His work has influenced several generations of artists and filmmakers throughout the 20th century.

An excellent new coffee table book on Knight by author and anthropologist Richard Milner has just been released. It tells his life story, shows a lot of his drawings, and explains how he developed his remarkable vision of extinct life.


Charles R. Knight: The Artist Who Saw Through Time
-----
Charles Knight on Wikipedia
Previously: Lost Continent video

12 comments:

Matthew Meyer said...

1897!!!!

I know that painting well. It is permanently ingrained on my mind from my dinosaur books that I owned as a child.

1897... just wow.

Natalie said...

I first heard about Knight through a graphic novel about the early days of fossil hunting, 'Bone sharps, cowboys, and thunder lizards: a tale of Edwin Drinker Cope ...' by Jim Ottaviani
http://books.google.ca/books?id=VL1ZbFG53PkC&printsec=frontcover&dq=thunderlizards&hl=en&sa=X&ei=df9lT5_lC4j20gGJhtTCCA&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=thunderlizards&f=false

This link has several page scans, with a young Knight appearing on page 11. We see him go through the process of creating his own research to in order to understand dinosaurs as living animals, visiting reptile experts, zoos and paleotologists. There's a sequence showing him painting this very picture, using models he made himself.

Moish said...

His New Year card is very Dinotopian.

Kessie said...

Oh wow, for his time, painting therapods active and fighting like that was revolutionary.

Scorchfield said...

Chalres after a camell event? :)

Lucas Durham said...

The Field Museum in Chicago has a bunch of mural size paintings by Charles R. Knight in their evolution wing. It's one of my favorite destinations when I'm visiting the museum.

One of the coolest depicts a Megaloceros on a hilltop.
http://charlesrknight.com/Gallery/Knight/Prehistoric/FMNH/CK1T.jpg
Reminds me of your own Irish Elk painting, James.

Unknown said...

Knight's dinosaur paintings were among the first things I tried to copy as a 7 or 8 year old budding artist. They are still among my favorite depictions of dinosaurs- anatomical flaws and all.

T. Arispe said...

Charles Knight is definitely one of my artistic inspirations. Not only was his work all over the dinosaur books and multimedia I owned as a child, but now as a student I admire his attention to anatomically accurate reconstruction, and his willingness to think outside of the box of contemporary conventional paleontology to portray his extinct subjects with a kind of dynamism that few others before him had dared to.

Warren B. said...

Kessie: from my understanding it wasn't that unusual at that time. Progressive, yes, but IIRC not too controversial until dinosaur palaeontology took a big step back in the early-mid 20thC - to the grey tail-dragging cold-bloods we all know and loathe.

(Well, maybe not 'loathe'. 'Cringe at', possibly)

I need to find somewhere that sells SA over here. Not easy to stumble across.

Derek said...

I just bought that copy of Scientific American and thought 'Gee...this style looks familiar' Shoulda known that it was yours.

RobNonStop said...

Science News: Did the egg laying nature of dinosaurs cause their extinction? http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/04/120417221713.htm

Linda Navroth said...

They have a great exhibit of a lot of his watercolor paintings at the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History, in a room above the main floor of the dinosaur room. It's awesome to see them!