- Source: Robert Bateman (painter)
Robert McLellan Bateman (born 24 May 1930) is a Canadian naturalist and painter, born in Toronto, Ontario.
Career
Bateman was always interested in art, but never intended to make a living from it. He was fascinated by the natural world in his childhood; he recorded the sightings of all of the birds in the area of his house in Toronto and created small paintings with birds in their habitats. He found inspiration from the Group of Seven; later, he became interested in making abstract paintings of nature, strongly influenced by the work of Franz Kline. It was not until the mid-1960s that he changed to his present style, realism. In 1954, he graduated with a degree in geography from the Victoria College in the University of Toronto. Afterwards, he attended Ontario College of Education. Starting in 1957, Bateman travelled around the world for 14 months in a Land Rover with his friend J. Bristol Foster. As they made their way through Africa, India, Southeast Asia, and Australia, Bateman painted and sketched what he saw.
Bateman became a high school teacher of art and geography, and continued focusing his life on art and nature. After two decades as a high school teacher, he became a full-time artist in 1976. A year later Mill Pond Press started making signed, limited edition prints of some of his paintings; over the years, these prints resulted in millions of dollars being raised for environmental causes. His work started to receive major recognition in the 1970s and 1980s. Robert Bateman's show in 1987, at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, drew a large crowd for a living artist. In 1999, the Audubon Society of Canada declared Bateman one of the top 100 environmental proponents of the 20th century.
He is also a spokesman for several environmental and preservation issues, using his art to raise funds for these causes. The majority of Bateman's paintings are in acrylic on various media, and have been shown in solo exhibitions around the world. He has been the subject of several films and books including The Art of Robert Bateman (1981), The World of Robert Bateman (1985), An Artist in Nature (1990), Natural Worlds (1996), Thinking Like a Mountain (2000), Birds (2002), New Works, (2010), Life Sketches (2015), Bateman’s Canada (2017) as well as several children's books.
Robert Bateman Secondary School in Abbotsford, British Columbia, Robert Bateman High School (currently closed) in Burlington, Ontario, and Robert Bateman Public School, Ottawa, Ontario are named for him. He is an Honorary Director of the North American Native Plant Society, and has received numerous honours and awards, including Officer of the Order of Canada and fourteen honorary doctorates from institutions such as the University of Victoria, University of Toronto, Royal Roads University, and McGill University.
At 93, Robert continues a schedule of painting daily and advocating for nature awareness and conservation.
Foundation
The Bateman Foundation, a national public charity, uses artwork to promote a connection to nature and the environment. Established in 2012 by Robert Bateman, the Foundation grew from his philosophy that by helping people reconnect with nature, they will be inspired to conserve and protect it. Through educational programs, community collaborations and Bateman Gallery exhibitions, the Foundation has influenced a generation of people to build a deeper relationship with the natural world.
The purpose of the Foundation was to promote the preservation and sustainability of the environment by:
Establishing and maintaining an art gallery to perpetuate, protect, enhance and promote the artistic and cultural legacy of nature-inspired artists, including Robert Bateman.
Supporting or developing educational programs relating to the environment and nature-inspired artists.
Robert Bateman is already aligned with child-in-nature philosophies. He is associated in the public mind with pro-nature education by his work, writings and public speaking. He is regarded by the national and international conservation community as a “hero” because of his lifelong support. He is a natural and gregarious teacher and his artwork is considered instructive. Robert Bateman is also perceived by many to be one of the voices of reason and hope for healthy, rejuvenated and creative engagement with the natural world:From the beginning of time we have been connected to nature, but for the first time in history, that connection threatens to be broken for most of an entire generation and perhaps generations to come. When children play in nature – climb trees, build forts and dams in creeks and go exploring – here is what happens: they have less obesity, less likelihood of developing attention deficit disorder, lower rates of depression and suicide, less alcohol and drug abuse, less bullying, plus, they get higher marks…nature is magic.Bateman’s Sketch Across Canada was a nationwide project started by the Bateman Foundation. They achieved their goal of distributing 33,000 free sketchbooks across the country, asking Canadians to venture outside and, in the words of Robert Bateman, “become bright-eyed three-year-olds again”.
The Bateman Foundation's flagship NatureSketch Program started in 2016 as a volunteer managed family program in Victoria. NatureSketch is an eco-literacy curriculum that encourages individuals to develop a personal connection to nature by teaching them how to observe and appreciate the natural world through art. The program is inspired by the artistic practices and personal philosophies of Robert Bateman and has been implemented in several major cities across Canada, reaching over 20,000 participants by 2023.
Personal life
In 1960, Robert Bateman married Suzanne Bowerman, having three children: Alan, Sarah, and John. He would then go on to marry Birgit Freybe Bateman in 1975, having two children: Christopher and Robert.
In the early 1980s, Bateman and Birgit moved to Salt Spring Island. The couple purchased a home located on Reginald Hill Road, looking out on Fulford Harbour, that was designed by Hank Schubart and originally built for actress Eileen Brennan, (d. July 28, 2013) In the early 2000s, the Batemans moved from the Reginald Hill house to a house on a lake in Salt Spring designed by their son in law, Robert Barnard.
Honours and awards
Life Member, Royal Canadian Academy of Arts
Queen Elizabeth Silver Jubilee Medal, 1977
Officer of the Order of Canada, 1984
Member of Honour Award, World Wildlife Fund, 1985 (presented by the Prince Philip)
Society of Animal Artists Award of Excellence 1979, 1980, 1981, 1986, 1990, 2008; Lifetime Achievement 2010
Lescarbot Award presented by the Canadian Government, 1992
Rachel Carson Award presented by the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Washington D.C., 1996
Order of British Columbia, 2001
Rungius Medal presented by the National Museum of Wildlife Art, 2001
Queen's Jubilee Medal, 2002
Roland Michener Conservation Award presented by the Canadian Wildlife Federation, 2003
Ideas for Life Award, Canadian Environment Awards, 2006
Human Rights Defender Award presented by Amnesty International, 2007
Niagara Escarpment Lifetime Achievement Award, 2009
Royal Canadian Geographical Society Gold Medal, 2013
World Ecology Award, University of Missouri-St. Louis, 2015.
International Brandwein Medal, Brandwein Institute, 2017
Jay N. Ding Darling Award, The Wildlife Society, 2017
Books
The Art of Robert Bateman. Biography by Ramsay Derry. Madison Press Books, 1981. (French ed. 1982, German ed. 1984)
The World of Robert Bateman. Biography by Ramsay Derry. Madison Press Books, 1984
Robert Bateman: An Artist in Nature. Biography by Rick Archbold. Madison Press Books, 1990
Robert Bateman: Natural Worlds. Text by Rick Archbold. Madison Press Books, 1996
Safari. Robert Bateman and Rick Archibald. 1998
Thinking Like a Mountain. Robert Bateman and Rick Archbold. Penguin Books, 2000
Birds. Robert Bateman and Kathryn Dean. Madison Press Books, 2002
Backyard Birds. Robert Bateman with Ian Coutts. Madison Press Books, 2005
Birds of Prey. Robert Bateman with Nancy Kovacs. Madison Press Books, 2007
Polar Worlds. Robert Bateman with Nancy Kovacs. Madison Press Books, 2008
Vanishing Habitats. Robert Bateman with Nancy Kovacs. Madison Press Books, 2010
Bateman: New Works. Greystone Books, 2010
Hope & Wild Apples. Bateman Foundation, 2012
Sight Unseen. Paul Gilbert, Bateman Foundation, 2014
Life Sketches: A Memoir. Simon & Schuster, 2015
Robert Bateman's Canada. Simon & Schuster, 2017
Films
“Down to Earth”, Zephyr Films, 2001
"Robert Bateman", Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, 1994
"A Day in the Life of Robert Bateman", Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1985
"Robert Bateman - Artist/Naturalist", Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Spectrum, 1984 (Donna Lu Wigmore, producer)
"Robert Bateman - A Celebration of Nature", Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Take 30, 1983 (Brigitte Berman, producer)
"The Nature Art of Robert Bateman", Eco-Art Productions, 1981 (Norm Lightfoot, producer)
"Images of the Wild: A Portrait of Robert Bateman", National Film Board of Canada, 1978 (Norm Lightfoot, director; Beryl Fox, producer)
"Robert Bateman", Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, This Land, 1972 (John Lucky, producer)
References
External links
Official website
Robert Bateman's Ideas Bateman's thoughts on various issues
Interview with the Oxonian Review in January 2011[usurped]
Audio interview with Bateman, October 2010
Robert Bateman
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