Bird studies to be auctioned for wildlife charity

A painting of a barn owl in flight in profile. Around it are labelled paintings of its different types of feathers, its egg and two angles of its skull. The owl has a round white face, tawny brown speckled feathers and yellow feet.Image source, Marzia Borracci
Image caption,

Mark Pollard of Lay's Auctioneers said the avian studies had been created with "time and care by a skilled and deliberate hand"

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A collection of avian art is being auctioned to benefit the wildlife charity that the artist helped to create.

Lay's Auctioneers in Penzance is selling 80 scientific studies of birds by Valentine Paton with proceeds going to the Cornwall Wildlife Trust (CWT) of which he and his botanist wife, Jean, were founding members.

The auction house's art cataloguer Mark Pollard said the studies were "an important documentation of Cornwall's avian history from a man who has quietly done much to benefit our county's wildlife, produced with time and care by a skilled and deliberate hand".

The online auction begins on 31 October and is set to end on 16 November.

Valentine Paton is standing outside sketching a white magnolia flower. He has grey hair and is wearing a white jacket over a red shirt and has a look of concentration.Image source, The Paton family
Image caption,

Mr Paton and his wife Jean were founding members of the Cornwall Wildlife Trust

Mr Paton, an architect who led the building of New County Hall in 1964, created the series of studies of British birds in the 1980s in his Probus home.

Many of them were rescued specimens brought to him by friends.

Mr Pollard said: "His mastery of form and detail, honed through both architectural precision - evident within the preparatory graphite drawings on graph paper - and a naturalist's eye, lends his work a quiet authority and gentle beauty."

A spokesperson for CWT said the money raised from the sale would be dedicated to "our work creating a Cornwall where nature thrives".

They said the Patons' contribution to the charity had been "astounding".

The spokesperson added: "In 2003, when Jean received her MBE, she and Pat were known to have added more than 20,000 observations - such as sightings of birds, butterflies, or plants - to various local and national wildlife recording projects."

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 5, A painting of a herring gull in profile with three lines describing it underneath. In the top right hand corner there are two paintings of its skull and one of the gull's egg. The bird has a yellow beak, white head and neck and mostly grey body with a black tip on its wing and an orange foot.,

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