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ART FOR conservati­on

Artist turned conservati­onist, the late David Shepherd, worked tirelessly to protect the wildlife he felt he owed for his success as an artist, and his legacy lives on through his eponymous foundation.

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In 1960 while in his late 20s, the RAF flew Brit David Shepherd, who was then an aviation artist, to Kenya, where he was commission­ed for his first wildlife painting – a rhino on a runway. His life forever changed.

While in Tanzania around this time, he encountere­d 255 dead zebras at a poisoned waterhole, and at that moment he became a conservati­onist. Years later, in the ’80s, David set up the David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation (DSWF), using his artworks to raise awareness and funds for conservati­on efforts across Africa and Asia.

In 2008, DSWF founded Wildlife

Artist of the Year, an annual worldrenow­ned competitio­n and exhibition, which has become a significan­t event on the arts calendar. To date, through David’s tireless efforts and with the support of leading internatio­nal artists, the Foundation has given away close to $19.5 million in grants for key conservati­on projects in these regions.

Shepherd continued to paint, and fight for conservati­on, until his death in 2017; now his family has taken the baton, continuing his legacy. David’s daughter, Mandy Shepherd (whose Panda art is pictured top left), and his granddaugh­ter, Emily Lamb, are both profession­al wildlife artists and DSWF

Art Ambassador­s, who use their artworks to create awareness and raise funds for conservati­on. Original artworks and prints of Shepherd’s also remain on sale today, including the limited-edition print (top right) titled Indian Summer.

The Foundation attributes much of its success to its partnershi­ps with leading artists around the world, including South African-born Simon

Max Bannister, who now lives in New Zealand. Simon’s bronze sculpture of three elephants (pictured right) represents tusked symbols of wisdom, patience and resilience.

He says: “Since I became aware of the David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation, I have found a way to give directly back to the very animals that inspire me… through the foundation, my work can now embody a story of survival in the face of man’s ills. These endangered creatures are in our hands, in our art, in our historical being. How could we, in our time, not do whatever we can to help them?”

It’s a sentiment that rings true for not only those who work for the Foundation but the conservati­on-minded among us who purchase the artworks.

This painted dog (inset) is a stoneware clay sculpture by Julie Wilson. Banteng at Sunrise (left) is an original acrylic on canvas by Marie Antoniou. The banteng, also known as tembadau, is a species of endangered cattle found in Southeast Asia. Fifty per cent of all of the artwork pictured above will go towards protecting endangered species such as elephants, tigers, pangolins, snow leopards, painted dogs, lions, chimpanzee­s and rhinos. davidsheph­erd.org

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