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Tucked away in Dallas sits a red-painted wonderland called Curiosities Antiques, where time travelers disguised as shoppers converge to hunt for fragments of the past amid what might be the most ...
The art piece, called Denim Gorilla, was inspired by écorché, a French term that refers to anatomical figures with exposed ...
This year’s Beach Haven Art Walk brought dozens of visual artists and artisans to the Queen City to display and sell their works of art in two and three dimensions, but one, Michael Clineman, stood ...
Aiming to elevate taxidermy to high art, Art Zoo opened Thursday in the heart of the Dutch capital, in a famous building from ...
Chris Moughan (left) displays the antlers of his whitetail buck from the 2024 hunting season with Ray Murawski of Ray’s taxidermy, who will be working on a shoulder mount of Moughan’s deer. (T ...
Chris Moughan (left) displays the antlers of his whitetail buck from the 2024 hunting season with Ray Murawski of Ray’s taxidermy, who will be working on a shoulder mount of Moughan’s deer. (T ...
Powell is the only school in the state that teaches taxidermy as art, according to the Wyoming Department of Education. Wind River High School students have a self-sustaining business of ...
The strange, soothing art of insect taxidermy (and where to learn it in Chicago) From beetle-pinning classes to possum yoga, the Insect Asylum offers citydwellers a place to commune with nature.
TAFT, Calif. (KERO) — Kamala Peevy breathes life into preserved insects, revealing the detailed processes behind her taxidermy art and her journey as a small business owner in Taft.
Black Crow Taxidermy & Art is headed up by Vivian Tham, who transformed her childhood fascination with dead animals into a lifelong pursuit of zoology and skin studies.
The Loftins went full-time in 2022, thanks to the growing market for insect taxidermy. They’ve also branched out into reptiles. Currently, their dream is to build their own butterfly ...
Is taxidermy a slowly dying art? One veteran Duluth taxidermist says it may be. But a new local artist says the tradition is alive and well.