
CV
Yes, as far back as I can remember, I loved my derwent pencils. Now I
have progressed into oils, acrylics, watercolours, lithography, lino cuts,
etchings and most recently, digital.
Using my original art or
photography, I create on my mac with a digital drawing tablet and pen . I then
take the image to Roland, my big printer in the spare room, decide on the medium
to be printed on, load up and start the print process.
This is called a Giclee print.
After 30 years of allowing others to control the end result and marketing of my work I have decided to do it all! This enables me to provided you with the best quality image that I possibly can and I hope you gain as much pleasure from living with it as I have in creating it.
Born: Perth,Western Australia, 1956.
Desktop publisher, painter,
illustrator, printmaker and writer
Trish Hart is one of Australias’ leading wildlife artists. Her ability to capture the essence and personality of the many wild creatures she has encountered during a life of adventure and travel is stunning.
After discovering Macintosh and photoshop, when it took a bank loan to afford both, she has spent many years exploring the possibilities with image creation and manipulation combined with type.
An early highlight of her successful career was a trip to the Antarctic
with the
Australian Antarctic Division to record wildlife for calendar and book
publications.
This experience, on the last trip of the Nella Dan, also resulted in the
completion of a set of five stamps for Australia Post.Trish has written
and illustrated five childrens’ books- “Antarctic
Diary” and
“There Are No Polar Bears Down There”, published by Thomas Nelson
Australia,
and “Wet and Dry”, “Night and Day” and “Big
and Small” published by Funtastic.
She has worked as a freelance illustrator, producing many calendars featuring
Australian wildlife, including one on Endangered Wildlife with the
World Wide Fund for Nature. Trish’s skills are now well known through
her work for the Gould League. Her
work has made the Gould League children’s publications works of art
in themselves
and resulted in her being given the Environment Award for Childrens Literature
in 1999 and being named runner up in 2000.
Her interest in wildlife in our oceans as well as the tall ships that
sail on
them resulted in published works on whales and dolphins and two
successful maritime exhibitions at the Melbourne Maritime Museum.
She has also had a one woman show at the Australian embassy in Washington,
USA.
Art Awards: Wildlife Artists Society of Australasia- Drawing Award.
First Prize, Victorian Artists Society Spring Exhibition.
Bibliography: Design World (Australia), first edition.
Artists & Galleries of Australia, Max Germaine.