Raised in Seattle, but working in San Francisco for the last 25 years, Sharon Beals photographs people and other creatures and ‘uses photography as an art form, and as a way to chronicle what moves my heart, and concerns my conscience’. This are her thoughts on her bird’s nests’ series:
Bird nests, even without knowing which birds constructed them, seem hardly possible. Creations of spider’s web, caterpillar cocoon, plant down, mud, found modern objects, human and animal hair, mosses, lichen, feathers and down, sticks and twigs–all are woven with beak and claw into a bird’s best effort to protect their next generation. But survival for so many birds is tenuous in a modern world where habitat loss is as common as the next housing development, and even subtle changes in climate can affect food supply. It is my hope that capturing the detailed art form of the nests in these photographs will gain appreciation for their builders, and inspire their protection.
The nest and eggs specimens, collected over the last two centuries, were photographed at The California Academy of Sciences, The Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, and The Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology. While few nests are collected today, these nests and eggs are used for research, providing important information about their builder’s habitats, DNA, diseases and other survival issues.
Beautiful Birds’ Nests Photographed by Sharon Beals
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Beautiful and so compelling -
Incredible that birds created these objects. You photographed them beautifully!