Walter William Ferguson
"Bean Lady"
Ferguson's work often combines classical techniques with modern design, and he was known for his versatility in subject matter. The painting shows a woman with a basket on her head, possibly selling beans or other goods, which is a common scene in many cultures and could be interpreted as a representation of daily life and the environment. This image is an example of his style, where a seemingly peaceful scene is used to draw attention to the relationship between humans and their environment.
This Art is:
- New
- Hand Signed Limited Edition Lithograph
- Edition Size of 495 (Actual # received may be different than the one in the photo )
- Printed in 1990
- Custom Framed in a dark frame
- Double matted in white and yellow
- Framed in the USA
- Framed Size: 41" x 32"
- Image Size: 31" x 22"
- Ready to hang hardware included
- Interested in different framing? Contact us!
- Image depicts an elderly Middle Eastern woman seemingly deep in thought waiting patiently to sell her beans for the day- typical of the region this could be an Arab woman in many place in the Middle East including Jerusalem (where the artist spent much time), Egypt, Jordan, Yemen, or Iraq to name a few places.
Walter William Ferguson was born in New York City in 1930 and died in 2015. He received his formal art training under scholarship at Yale School of Fine Arts and Pratt Institute. . He has exhibited widely abroad and his paintings are in many private collections.
Ferguson is a 1948 graduate of Midwood High School, and is known to have painted at least two murals at the school while he was a student. Both murals still exist in their original locations as of January 2016.
Noted for his versatility, Ferguson paints a wide variety of subjects from wildlife to portraits and landscapes. His classical technique combined with modern design have been developed over 60 years and honed to a high degree of sensitivity.
In addition to his fine art, Ferguson has produced limited editions of serigraphs and litho-offsets prints. He has written and illustrated seven books and illustrated 26 books and many articles. He was commissioned by LIFE magazine to illustrate endangered species. Ferguson wrote and illustrated a book on The Mammals of Israel. He also illustrated the book written by Paula Arnold called Birds of Israel in 1962. His paintings have helped raise funds to reintroduce into Israel animals that became extinct since Biblical times.
Ferguson has worked for the American Museum of Natural History where he did paintings reconstructing extinct animals. He moved to Israel in 1965, where he briefly taught art at Bezalel School of Art. He has been staff artist for the Department of Zoology of the Tel Aviv University for 29 years. In addition to his fine art, Ferguson has contributed to zoology and Paleoanthropology.
A 2010 interview of Walter Ferguson by Ynet, Israel's largest and most popular news and content website, was published under the Ecology & Science that covered his career work including a live interview.
The works by Ferguson have helped increase the popularity of animal artwork in Israel, as reported in the Jerusalem Post article "Wildlife art exhibit to open at Jerusalem Bird Observatory" by Sharon Udasin on October 27, 2011.
Walter Ferguson was asked to contribute several environmental paintings to the first Environmental Impact show and subsequent tour that premiered at the Canton Museum of Art in Ohio on September 1, 2013.
Ferguson died on December 18, 2015.
In 2017, Ynet published another article under a quote Ferguson used to describe his work's objective of capturing the spark of life in his paintings. An article, "Memory of an Environmental Impact", was published in the MAHB during the follow-on exhibit and tour called Environmental Impact II that is coping with the 2020 pandemic.