Bird Food by Chris Maynard

Kingfisher and Sandlance, turaco tail feathers, 15 x 12 inches

Kingfisher and Sandlance, turaco tail feathers, 15 x 12 inches

These four-inch skinny salt-water fish swim in abundance in Puget Sound. Bigger fish and kingfishers, gulls, puffins, cormorants, diving ducks, and grebes dine on them. To escape, they bury themselves under the sands. Sometimes, while walking during a low tide, I notice these little fish squirting from the sand in response to my heavy footsteps. Unlike the herring of the region, not a lot is known about them even though, like herring, they are a vital food for salmon and other creatures.  

Simple Facts About Keratin by Chris Maynard

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Keratin is the strongest of animal materials.* Some creatures keep their keratin parts—sheep keep their horns, we keep our toenails (although we clip them a lot), and cats and dogs keep their claws. Some creatures shed their keratin parts constantly—we keep shedding our skin as little flakey dust particles. Some creatures shed their keratin parts regularly—birds shed their feathers and snakes shed their skins.

Skin, fingernails, hair, horns, beaks, claws, spines, hoofs, scales, whale baleen, and most complicated of all, feathers are coverings that protect and assist us animals. They are barriers against disease, scrapes, the sun’s rays, and cold. They provide camouflage, filter out shrimp and fish for baleen whales, and provide protection against predators for porcupines. Our skin, which is largely made of keratin, provides a barrier against viruses. Male antelope use their horns to fight each other before and during mating season. Keratin in claws help dogs, moles, and other creatures dig, and help cats climb. As feathers, keratin keeps birds warm, dry, and able to fly.

  • Interestingly, sea creatures and insects grow somewhat similar materials for some similar uses: insects grow sclerotin which sometimes they shed as they grow. and sea creatures like crabs use chitin which they sometimes shed as they grow. Only creatures with backbones grow keratin.

Abundance vs the Lackluster-ness of Money by Chris Maynard

wild turkey feathers, about to be plucked

wild turkey feathers, about to be plucked

I tend to think that everything has a price, not just things but also time, experiences, and even happiness. There is something wrong here. Because money is the medium of exchange for everything, things like my art become reduced to merely a sum. In that way, a thing is reduced to a concept of worth. So for instance, a horse and my art become interchangeable if they have equal worth. But they are not equal at all. Each has its separate and unique sparkle. Life loses some sparkle if money is my primary way to evaluate things.

That is why I found myself thrilled while helping a friend pluck a turkey. The many, many feathers took on a sparkle when I realized their beauty and abundance while not connecting them in my mind to money. I wasn’t saying to myself, “how much are they worth?”. Instead, they each became little complex and beautiful worlds unto themselves.

Feathers Come From Fish Teeth by Chris Maynard

Quetzalcoatl detail . green-wing macaw tail feather and shed rattlesnake skin

Quetzalcoatl detail . green-wing macaw tail feather and shed rattlesnake skin

According to Paleontologist Neil Shubin in his book Your Inner Fish, teeth were the first hard things that developed in any creature’s bodies, even bones. They developed in early jawless and boneless fish like lampreys. The way they developed, by folding of inner and outer layer of skin, paved the way for the same process to be adapted to the development of feathers and also scales and other organs like mammary breasts. He states, “the battery of major genetic switches that are active in this process in each kind of tissue are largely similar. “ and, “We would never have scales, feathers, or breasts if we didn’t have teeth in the first place.”

I am drawn to this idea because it means that we share more with other creatures than we usually think.

Where Omelettes Come From by Chris Maynard

Indebted to Chickens . turkey feathers . 15 x 27 inches

Indebted to Chickens . turkey feathers . 15 x 27 inches

Some chickens get to run around in small flocks, eat bugs, scratch around, and generally have pretty good lives. Others are caged on top of each other for maximum production. They have terrible lives. But regardless, I often eat their eggs even though the eggs from birds that get to nibble on grass and bugs taste better. I made this piece because I am grateful that chickens make eggs for us. Thank you chickens.  

Legendary and Mythic Birds by Chris Maynard

Plumed serpent cut from an argus pheasant feather

Plumed serpent cut from an argus pheasant feather

This is Wikepedia’s list of mythic birds. They seem to have left out a major legendary creature, the Quetzalcoatl or plumed serpent of mesoamerica. God of wind and rain as well as of art and literature; creator of humans and perhaps destroyer also.

  • Adarna – has healing powers, put people to sleep, and turn people into stone (Philippines)

  • Aethon – eagle tormentor of Prometheus

  • Alkonost – female with body of a bird (Russian)

  • Alectryon – rooster (Greek)

  • Alicanto – bird with luminescent feathers which feeds on gold or silver (Chilean)

  • Bare-fronted Hoodwink

  • Bennu – self-creating deity, Phoenix (Egyptian)

  • Bird People

  • Cockatrice

  • Caladrius – white bird with healing powers (Roman)

  • Cetan – hawk spirit (Native American – Lakota tribe of North and South Dakota)

  • Chamrosh – body of a dog, head & wings of a bird (Persian Myth)

  • Chol (Biblical mythology) – regenerative bird

  • Cinnamon bird – builds nests out of cinnamon (Arabia)

  • Devil Bird – shrieks predicting death, like banshee (Sri Lankan)

  • Feng Huang – reigns over other birds (China)

  • Gandaberunda – two headed magical bird (Hindu)

  • Gamayun – prophetic bird with woman's head (Russian)

  • Garuda – known as the primordial bird and the progenitor of all birds; vehicle of Lord Vishnu (Hindu, Buddhist)

  • Griffin – guards treasure and priceless possessions (Greek)

  • Harpy – ugly winged bird woman, steals food (Greek)

  • Hræsvelgr – giant who takes the form of an eagle (Norse mythology)

  • Horus – deity (Egypt)

  • Hugin and Munin – two ravens that serve as messengers (Norse mythology)

  • Itsumade – monstrous bird with a human face (Japan)

  • Minokawa – Giant, Dragon-like bird in Philippines (Philippines)

  • Nachtkrapp – (The Night Raven)

  • Oozlum bird – (Australian and British folk tales)

  • Owlman – compared to America's Mothman (England)

  • Pamola – bird/moose spirit who causes cold weather (Abenaki)

  • Phoenix – (Greek)

  • Piasa  – Enormous bird outside of Alton Illinois, memorialized on rock painting;[1] last reported sighting 1973 when the bird carried off two children [2]

  • Ra – Deity (Egypt)

  • Rain Bird – bird who brought rain (Native American)

  • Roc – enormous legendary bird of prey

  • Shangyang – rainbird (Chinese)

  • Simurgh

  • Sirin – birds with women heads, lured men to their death (Russia, Greek)

  • Strix – owl that ate human flesh (Greek)

  • Stymphalian birds – man-eating birds (Greek)

  • Tengu – has human and bird characteristics, name means dog (Japan)

  • Three-legged bird (various cultures)

  • Thunderbird – (Native American, American Southwest, Great Lakes, and Great Plains)

  • Thoth – deity (Egypt)

  • Turul – mythological bird of prey

  • Vermilion Bird – (Chinese)

  • Vucub Caquix – bird demon

  • Yatagarasu – three-legged crow

  • Zhenniao – poisonous bird (Chinese)

  • Ziz – giant griffin (Jewish)

  • Zu – divine monster depicted as 

My Weird Fear by Chris Maynard

Random page from my 2019 sketchbook. None of these ideas have been pursued. Maybe someday.

Random page from my 2019 sketchbook. None of these ideas have been pursued. Maybe someday.

My great fear is not about being able to come up with ideas, that is easy. It is about coming up with too many. This morning, I sat in my studio with my pen and sketchbook with the intent to jot down some scratchy drawings toward fulfilling a commission which will consist of four separate pieces. I did this in a few minutes. During the next twenty minutes, from those four ideas flowed twenty more, which have the potential to spawn 50 more. Do you understand what I am saying? I am excited to make every one of my ideas into art and my fear is that I won’t be able to, which I won’t because I always come up with too many ideas.

Boundaries by Chris Maynard

Worm Food . 12” x 18” . turkey feathers

Worm Food . 12” x 18” . turkey feathers

My body is made of the food I eat. Same with a bird.

A robin eats worms and reconstitutes them into its muscles and beak and feet and feathers. The leftovers come out the other end and become worm food. In this sense, the boundaries of what a bird is and what a worm is become fuzzy. In the same vein, I suspect that the boundaries of what and who I am are also less distinct than I usually imagine.

Dark Winter Day, New Studio Door Sculpture by Chris Maynard

Studio Door, dark winter day

Studio Door, dark winter day

You will find me inside this studio door on most dark winter days. The short, dark and cold days please me because the studio is cozy and I want to be there. Not so much in the summer when warmer days beckon.

Greg Bartol and I made the new metal sculpture in his metal shop. I just installed it above the studio door. Thank you Greg!

Without Feathers, We Are Naked by Chris Maynard

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I learned a new word: “metalute”. It comes from the Mehinaku language, a tribe that still lives in forests of Brazil and means that one is naked unless wearing feathers. I first read about this in a New York Times article (great article on the transformative, talismanic power of feathers, August, 2019) that referenced the anthropologist Thomas Gregor. I found his Mehinaku paper in Portuguese entitled The Drama of Daily Life in a Brazilian Indian Village that was published in 1977 and was able to sort of muddle my way through it with my Spanish.

2020 Calendar by Chris Maynard

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Every year we print a one page 11” x 14” calendar on heavy paper. They are usually sent only as gifts, not for sale.

However this year, until the end of 2019, I am making this calendar available to my blog and newsletter readers at my cost of $10 which will cover the heavy paper, printing, envelopes, our time, and mailing within the USA. Pay through PayPal or send a check or cash to Featherfolio LLC, 8211 Ayer Street SE, Olympia, WA 98501. Outside the USA, it is $15 and you can use info@featherfolio to pay through PayPal.

Awareness by Chris Maynard

Gull Flight . great blue turaco tail feathers . 30 “ x 24” . for a commission

Gull Flight . great blue turaco tail feathers . 30 “ x 24” . for a commission

Awareness depends on what we focus on, right? Well, duh.

When I read the book "Salt: a World History" by Mark Kurlansky, the whole of human history seemed to revolve around our use of salt. When I read a book by E.O. Wilson, all land-based life appears to have something to do with ants. When I get a new car, I notice how many cars are the same make and model as mine.

Since my artistic focus is solely about birds and uses only feathers, that might say something about my sanity. My world can sort of revolve around feathers. But an advantage of this specialization is that flight and hope and other metaphors associated with feathers are a big part of my life. Maybe that is why I feel so joyful and light most of the time.

Abstraction by Chris Maynard

Swiftsure . great argus pheasant secondary wing feathers, naturally shed, one from each wing

Swiftsure . great argus pheasant secondary wing feathers, naturally shed, one from each wing

A bird interprets what it sees through its visual process—light to eyes to brain. This interpretation is sort of an abstraction, an inference. The thing thought to be seen is not the thing, it is just light waves reflected off a surface that has to be interpreted in order to make sense of it.

Humans carry this interpretation process to the nth degree through language. We base our conscious thoughts on our abstraction process of language. We don’t often experience life directly but through our thoughts which are shaped by our language like the words on this page. For instance, the word for feather is not the feather but is a concept that we codify into language so we can communicate the idea of “feather” to each other. The word is static while an actual feather is not. So when we see a feather, we are likely not fully seeing it but rather thinking of it as the word that we learned for what a feather should be. The actual feather is much more grand.

Art can get past our limited language-based concepts. For this reason, I am pleased that I have chosen feathers as my medium. By using an actual feather, I remove a layer of abstraction which would exist if I represented the feather with a drawing or sculpture. Then by carving the feather, the result does not quite fit into the word or concept we have of what a feather should be and in that moment, there is an opening to see them differently, with new eyes and maybe with wonder.

A Bird's Home by Chris Maynard

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Feathers are a birds home. They keep a bird warm, dry, and protected from the sun. If we had feathers, our world would look very different. We too would be warm, dry, and modest so we would not need any clothes. We would not need houses. And if the feathers helped us fly, we wouldn’t need roads to get from here to there.

Taking a Break by Chris Maynard

Taking a Break . 5 x 7 inches . ringtail duck secondary (speculum) wing feathers

Taking a Break . 5 x 7 inches . ringtail duck secondary (speculum) wing feathers

This September was for me, a time of art shows and travel. So I took a short break from my studio and making of art. Sort of like this drake and hen duck watching their offspring, I took a break to watch my art interact with the world.

What is the Most Beautiful Feather? by Chris Maynard

Argus Pheasant English Alphabet made from patterns in their feathers. 24 x 18 inches . $15 which includes shipping within USA,  $20 for outside the USA. Email the payment to info@featherfolio through PayPal .

Argus Pheasant English Alphabet made from patterns in their feathers. 24 x 18 inches . $15 which includes shipping within USA, $20 for outside the USA. Email the payment to info@featherfolio through PayPal .

It’s the patterns on the feathers that make this peacock-sized bird so awesome.   How can a bird that grows only black, white and brown feathers be so attractive?  For me, it’s because the patterns vary so much.  The bird sports eyes on some of its wing feathers that look exactly like the eye spots on some moths.  And there are not only one or two eyes on each feather but 10 or more!  At 30 inches long, these impress me as the most wondrous feathers on earth.  

I still have a number of these argus alphabet posters. They were printed a few years ago and I have been so busy with original art that these were not marketed much or distributed. If you would like one or some (or wholesale orders) email us at info@featherfolio.com. Retail is $10 each plus shipping.

The Poster: 24 x 18 inches, $10 each, $5 shipping for up to 7 (within the USA call for shipping prices outside the USA). Shipped rolled in a thick tube.

Ground and Sky by Chris Maynard

Ground and Sky study 1 . shed rattlesnake skin and mute swan feather . 5 x 7 inches

Ground and Sky study 1 . shed rattlesnake skin and mute swan feather . 5 x 7 inches

I am still struggling to find ways to incorporate flattened, shed snakeskins into my work.

I’ve always been drawn to feathers because they represent one of my basic desires: to fly; to move about freely in the air with no restraints. Now i am confused because I also feel a strong pull toward these shed snakeskins which, if anything, represent the opposite of feathers. So I find myself this summer lying on the ground, feeling the pull of gravity and the closeness of the plants and soil. Although I am unable easily slither and move about anywhere near the grace of a snake.

In partial recognition of this concurrent pull to the earth and to the skies, these opposing but complimentary forces, I tried out using both themes in several small studies. Here is one. What do you think?

This is only 5 x 7 inches because that is the widest that the largest width of the rattlesnake skin I have. I would like to find some larger snakeskin sheds. Do you know of anyone with a 20 foot python?