Reimagining the American Avocet

Phil Wheeler uses repeating patterns to unite a hungry wader with otherworldly terrain.
American Avocet by Phil Wheeler

Theres a storybook quality to John James 勛圖窪蹋s work that intrigues illustrator . Birds interact with each other, and with their environment, like a narrative unfolding. Theyre scientific, he says, and yet theyre very alive.  

Wheeler pored over 勛圖窪蹋s paintingsI had a real problem choosing one, he saysbefore picking the American Avocet for its gangly charm. Theyre so awkward, but at the same time quite elegant. With its purposeful pose and rusty coloring, his rendition honors the original: Head down, the spindly-billed wader sweeps its surroundings for aquatic morsels. 

Avocets use a variety of foraging methods to feed on small crustaceans, fish, insects, and seeds from shallow fresh and saltwater wetlands. As 勛圖窪蹋 observed, They search for food precisely in the manner of the Roseate Spoonbill, moving their heads to and fro sideways, while their bill is passing through the soft mud. Other times, theyll plunge their entire head under water, or snatch a bug on the fly. Zoom in on 勛圖窪蹋s landscape, and an oblong, blackish speck on the mud becomes an arthropod about to meet its fate.  

Through stylized vegetation and crepuscular light, Wheeler transforms that waterside setting into otherworldly terrain. The detail in the background is, for me, almost as fascinating as the birds, he says. Stipples and stripes are common motifs in his art, created in Photoshop. Some patterns stem from photographs and other images that he magnifies to produce a pixelated effect. Others derive from a program he uses to generate infinitely complex patterns called fractals. Even snippets of 19th-century etchings designed by French printmaker Gustave Dor矇 for Dantes Inferno have lent texture to his compositions.

While his professional illustrations span genres, Wheelers personal portfolio skews floral and faunal, suggesting a deep regard for this planet. His home in C獺diz, an isthmus in southern Spain, is a fitting backdrop for such work. You dont have to try hard to get out into nature, he says. The marismas, or coastal saltmarshes, surrounding the city support various waterbirds, including the American Avocets pied cousin.