Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Scott Musgrove Honors “Nola” the White Rhino in New Painting

Scott Musgrove's art has always been connected to conservation or extinction. Featured here on our blog and in issues 2, 8 and 24, his paintings feature lush, highly detailed landscapes and up-close encounters with all manner of strange and beautiful creatures. When he paints animals, he brings them back to life and preserves them into their pristine, natural environment. His new work, a magnificent 40" x 50" oil portrait of the rhino "Nola" is more than just a preservation of her image, it's also an homage to the memory of her species.

Scott Musgrove’s art has always been connected to conservation or extinction. Featured here on our blog and in issues 2, 8 and 24, his paintings feature lush, highly detailed landscapes and up-close encounters with all manner of strange and beautiful creatures. When he paints animals, he brings them back to life and preserves them into their pristine, natural environment. His new work, a magnificent 40″ x 50″ oil portrait of the rhino “Nola” is more than just a preservation of her image, it’s also an homage to the memory of her species.

Nola was one of five remaining Northern White Rhinos who lived at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park in California. She was wild caught in Shambe, located in the southern savanna woodlands of Sudan, and was rescued from the violent poaching that is prevalent in that region when she was only a few years old. When she died last summer, she was too old to breed and there are also no other surviving members of her species that are capable of breeding. Her species was headed for extinction without a doubt. “So I decided to paint her portrait,” Musgrove shared in an email to Hi-Fructose.

“Here’s a little video showing how my “vanishing rhino” painting works. If a person gets too close to this endangered animal, it will ‘disappear’. But if you back off or stay still and patient, it will reappear.” (Source)

Musgrove’s portrait of Nola took the artist nearly five months to complete in between traveling and other projects, and after painstaking trials and studies. “I wanted to show the effect of humans on some of these endangered animals,” he says. “To help illustrate how quickly so many species are vanishing, I devised a way to make that happen with my painting of Nola.” The painting is unique in that Musgrove has embedded a motion sensor into a special frame, so that when the viewer gets too close to it, the painting remarkably appears to vanish.

“Here’s a little video of the Nola sketch.” (Source)

“That sensor cuts the power to the ‘smart glass’ in the frame. This glass is clear when it has a current running through it, but if you cut the power it turns to white and obscures the painting. So, hopefully the viewer feels the immediate effect they have on the animal they are approaching. If the viewer retreats, the painting will reappear. Or, if they stay still and are patient, the painting will return,” he explains. “In tribute, I wanted to paint a portrait of her but also somehow illustrate the loss of her species.”

Catch Scott Musgrove’s work in Turn the Page: The First Ten Years of Hi-Fructose Exhibition at Virginia MOCA, opening this weekend.

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Calling his surreal paintings “suspended moments,” artist Erik Thor Sandberg captures ongoing narratives that exist before and after the scene in question. Whether it’s a towering skeleton consuming flesh or a fairytale-like jaunt between fantasy creatures, Sandberg’s paintings offer both whimsy and unsettling spectacle. He was last featured on HiFructose.com here.
Ben Sanders crafts acrylic and oil paintings on panel with a texture and sensibility that exist far outside of convention. His new show at Ochi Projects in Los Angeles, titled "I Come to the Garden Alone" collects works created over the past two years. Giving life to everyday objects, the artist is able to construct narratives that both autobiographical and universal.
Mikiko Kumazawa’s hand brings both richness and chaos touch to contemporary life. Whether in pencil drawings or visceral sculptures, the Tokyo-based artist depicts worlds that are just connected enough to our realities to inspire anxiety. Kumazawa was last featured on HiFructose.com here.
The dark and insanely detailed drawings of Laurie Lipton mix elements from different eras of art and time, including her own surreal version of reality.  When asked her to describe her meticulous, cross-hatching in one word,  she answered, "sick" (with a grin).  She has exhibited and lived all over the world from Holland, Germany, France, and recently London, where she spent time with the likes of Terry Gilliam, one of her favorite creatives. She will exhibit the art discussed here at Ace Gallery in Los Angeles next year.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List