Description

Artwork by ©️ Juan Travieso

LIMITED EDITION OF 50 — SIGNED BY THE ARTIST!

If you have any questions, please email shop@aba.org.

The photo above does not show the artist signature, but these posters will be signed.

Poster details: Actual size 12.5 in x 16.5 in, #100 Cougar smooth cover stock, matte finish

The Pileated Woodpecker—quite common in the southeastern United States, increasing in other parts of the East, present throughout much of southern Canada, and uncommon in some parts of the West—has adapted to people and disturbed forests as it increases its presence in urban areas. This large and hardy bird can be at turns cryptic, silently working tree trunks and logs while disappearing in the dim light of the understory, or conspicuous, unmistakably gliding through a wooded ravine with its trademark cackle. Its huge form and far-reaching laughter are often the highlight of a day’s birding excursion. The ABA is proud that the Pileated Woodpecker, emblem of both the wild woods and the adaptability of birds to anthropogenically altered spaces, is our 2021 Bird of the Year.

We see these qualities too in Juan Travieso’s entrancing 2021 Bird of the Year art. The Pileated’s profile is spliced with stark red and fuchsia lines, which blend into its crest and mustache stripe as if they were diagnostic marks. The bird is overlaid on digital cubes, speaking to its, and maybe all birds’, merger with digital identities: we think of birds through our online understanding of them. The red vine leaves and pink flowers draped behind the bird add an almost pop sensibility, perhaps both a reinforcement and reevaluation of the Pileated Woodpecker’s iconicism.