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Choose a category to view some of Mary McClelland's
paintings
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The Paintings of Mary McClelland
Animals
Mary adored animals, and the majority
of her paintings are of animals from around the
world. In her artistic life she went through
phases of falling in love with one kind of animal or
another, moving from water creatures, to insects, to
whales, to camels, and especially elephants.
Several of Mary's paintings show animals that are
dead, but why she seemed to like to paint dead things
has always been a bit of a mystery. She herself
was always "passionately vague" about what her
paintings signified. One thing for certain,
though, is that she was not the least bit macabre in
her outlook, nor was she at all obsessed with "dark
thoughts," as one might be led to think. Perhaps
Mary's paintings of death arose from her deeply held
belief in absolute honesty. Death is, after all,
a very real part of the world in which we live, and
maybe it is dishonest to look away from it. Mary
was fond of pointing out that when you take a walk in
the woods (as she loved to do in the family summer home
on Yelping Hill) at least half of what you see is
dead. Why ignore this? It seems that Mary's
paintings may have been a statement that animals and
nature, including death, are an absolute manifestation
of God's work on earth and must be seen, painted,
enjoyed, and worshiped for what they truly are.
Click on an image...
Mammals
Birds
Fish, Amphibians, and Other Creatures
Other animal paintings...
Original Mouse (tempera on matboard,
17" x 20")
Looking into a Dead Bird (casein on
wood, 27" x 13")
Bat (oil on plaster, 16" x 30")
Brown Mouse (casein on wood, 23" x
16")
Ram (oils, 32" x 38")
Whale (oil on cowskin)
Dead Squirrel and Moon (oil on canvas,
40" x 37")
Wolf
Dead Bird
Dead Mole
Indian Sacred Calf
Eland
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