On Sunday, the Concord Bookshop had a guest speaker, bird maven David Allen Sibley.
There was a great turnout to hear him and to have him sign the new edition of his guide.
He talked about his painting process and his interest in perception as it applies to people who are convinced they see a bird they are looking for. From what he has read, he says, it’s very much like the phenomenon of witness identification of suspects — many factors may distort what witnesses think they see. (Consider the old guy in the play Twelve Angry Men, for example, who didn’t have his glasses on.)
When asked how 12 people who identified the probably extinct ivory-billed woodpecker in Louisiana in recent years could all be wrong, he tries to explain why it’s likely: They get only a glimpse, they are desperate to see it, they are being paid to find it, etc.
I want to believe they saw it, of course, but I thought his points were interesting.
Also interesting was the way he paints. He has a very good sense of the profile of the bird, having drawn birds since he was seven. So in the wild he looks for identifying markers, sketches in the profile, and adds the marks. Then he paints the bird in the studio. He does a lot of research, but once he has done all he can, he takes only about an hour to do each painting.
Read more at Sibley’s website, here, and at his Facebook page, here.
Below is a bird that a woman in the audience Sunday asked about, the Snowy Owl. The questioner wanted know whether the many Snowy Owls that were sighted around New England this winter would stay. He said that, no, they were already heading back to the Arctic and only came because there were a lot of babies hatched up north this year and not enough food to go around.
Art: David Allen Sibley
Snowy owl
What an incredible skill he has! But I’m sorry to hear that he thinks the ivory-billed woodpecker really is extinct . . .
Yes, I am definitely one of those people who imagines seeing extinct birds. Just clinging to false hopes, I guess.