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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Chris Rose, Winter fox

Chris Rose b. 1959

Winter fox
oil on linen
44 x 48 in. (112 x 122 cm)
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(Category winner of the David Shepherd Wildlife Artist of the Year Award, 2018)

 

A pair of foxes took up residence in a hawthorn and blackthorn thicket a hundred metres from the back of my garden in the rural Scottish Borders. In recent winters they have been very visible during the day, spending mornings curled up asleep in the winter sunshine, or hunting through the long grass and scrub at field edges. This has given me a rare opportunity to study and sketch them, and this large oil painting is a product of those observations.

 

In winter, foxes grow a much thicker coat, which can be fluffed-up against the cold making them look quite different to the slender, sleek fox of the summer months. This fox is not hunting particularly, but has just stopped to check out a sound or a movement in the dead grasses. He is probably well-fed as I have recently lost two of my chickens to him!

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