Shipping the art is not included in the sale price. The item/items will be shipped directly from the artist. This is to mitigate damage to the art in transit. The majority of our artists are UK based, however, many are from South Afracica, Europe and the USA.
Once the art is purchased, the artist will contact you to arrange shipping and to make arrangements for the shipping payment. They are also happy to chat and answer any questions you might have.
Please take note that there may be import/export costs payable for international deliveries.
If you wish to discuss anything before purchasing art, please contact us via the live watsapp chat button or email [email protected].
I am a published conservation artist from the UK and I specialise in highly detailed oil paintings and pencil drawings.
I have always been passionate about wildlife and the natural world. I have a Bachelors Degree in Zoology and a Masters degree in Biodiversity and Conservation.
As soon as heard about the Invicta wildlife fund I wanted to get involved. Art is a powerful tool to help spread awareness and reach people who are perhaps unaware of what’s happening in the animal world. I believe in the power of promoting conservation through art whether through artivism or catching peoples attention with a beautiful painting.
Aside from working with many charities I plant trees with every painting I sell, creating beautiful art and helping to restore our natural world one painting at a time.
Originally, the Grey Wolf was the world’s most widely distributed mammal. It has become extinct in much of Western Europe, in Mexico and much of the USA, and their present distribution is more restricted; wolves occur primarily but not exclusively in wilderness and remote areas. Their original worldwide range has been reduced by about one-third by deliberate persecution due to depredation on livestock and fear of attacks on humans. Since about 1970, legal protection, land-use changes, rural human population shifts to cities and increasing prey populations have arrested wolf population declines and fostered natural recolonization in parts of its range and reintroduction in three areas of USA. Continued threats include competition with humans for livestock and game species, exaggerated concern by the public regarding the threat and danger of wolves, and fragmentation of habitat, with resulting areas becoming too small for populations with long-term viability.
Although the Grey Wolf still faces some threats, its relatively widespread range and stable population trend mean that the species, at global level, does not meet, or nearly meet, any of the criteria for the threatened categories. The global population is estimated to be in the order of 200-250 thousands individuals. Therefore, it is assessed as Least Concern. However, at regional level, several wolf populations, such as those in Europe, are seriously threatened
SOURCE: IUCN REDLIST