Lady Amherst Pheasant (1918-1922)

Technique: Giclée quality print
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"Lady Amherst's Pheasant" is truly a testament to Charles Robert Knight's intricate and detailed artistic style, painted between 1918 and 1922. In this captivating work, Knight paints the exotic and vibrant Lady Amherst's Pheasant with a realism that almost allows the viewer to feel part of its natural, lush environment.The male pheasant, with its striking colors, dominates the scene. It shows off a brilliant plumage with a white and midnight blue crest, a dazzling ruby throat, and a spectacularly long tail with dark rings, evoking a sense of regal splendor rooted in the natural world. Adjacent, a female pheasant and another, which is slightly obscured, offer a subdued contrast with their earthy tones and patterns that blend harmoniously with the dense, green foliage surrounding them.Knight's handling of color and texture brings this scene to life with warmth and vibrancy, suggesting a peaceful moment in a sunlit forest clearing. This painting not only showcases Knight's ability to portray animals with scientific accuracy and artistic elegance, but it also conveys a rich, serene snapshot of wildlife in its most splendid form.

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Charles Robert Knight (October 21, 1874 – April 15, 1953) was a groundbreaking American artist best known for his illustrations of wildlife and prehistoric life. His dynamic paintings of ancient creatures, especially dinosaurs, had a profound impact on how the public visualized these animals in the early twentieth century.

Knight’s works have been prominently displayed in books, exhibitions, and major natural history museums throughout the United States, such as the American Museum of Natural History in New York and Chicago’s Field Museum. His skill in recreating extinct animals with both scientific accuracy (as it was then understood) and artistic imagination captured the fascination of viewers of all ages.

Among his most renowned achievements is the mural showing a dramatic encounter between Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops. This important piece not only brought widespread attention to these dinosaurs but also helped cement their image as rivals—a portrayal that remains deeply rooted in popular culture today.

Although Knight created his illustrations with limited paleontological knowledge and frequently fragmentary fossil evidence, his artwork established a benchmark for subsequent paleoartists. Even as later discoveries revealed errors in some of his imagery, his true legacy endures in the generations he inspired and his reputation as "one of the great popularizers of the prehistoric past".