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Village Squire, 1981-04, Page 8iy 8 The Courthouse Square Goderich 524-4400 Treat yourself To a complete European Pedicure & Professional Manicure. All for the price of a pedicure. Special continues until April 15. Free skin care & make-up consultation for all '81 Brides. ,4eac}teS �n Cra,1 SKIN CARE STUDIO CAROL GOWING Qualified Aesthetician & Electrologist Open Tuesday thru Saturday 32 Newgate St., Goderich 524-4403 PG. 6 VILLAGE SQUIRE/APRIL 1981 Portrait of an Artist by Sheila Gunby "Most of my best paintings are done on inspiration- on that fleeting glimpse of a fox against a split rail fence, a grouse talking off or a deer on my property." Bill Creighton. Wildlife painter and professional wildlife biologist. An artist who knows the environment wild crea- tures inhabit and captures them on canvas. "In the animal world. I like painting foxes and moose," he says, "In the bird world, waterfowl is an interest of mine. flights of ducks in wetland areas. Just a quarter of a mile down the road is a beaver pond; I want to go there and do some sketches." Creighton lives on a farm in the north end of Huron County in the township of West Wawanosh and he works with the Wingham Branch of the Ministry of Natural Resources. "I never really got serious about painting until 1966." he says, "1 did some sketches for the old Department of Lands and Forests publications; I did some deer and moose and people started buying the originals. So I did some more sketches. I've always been interested in watercolours so I started doing black and white watercolours and people began seeing them at work. and at home." From there. Creighton expanded into regular watercolours and now does about 30 paintings a year, keeping his best for the public. His work has been shown in outdoor exhibits. starting in Newmarket. then in Markham and in Toronto at the Christel Gallery and The Third Gallery. After an employment move to London, his work was shown at the Glenn Gallery. He recently exhibited at the Burdette Wildlife Gallery, near Orangeville. In 1975, he put some paintings in a Canadian Nature Federation contest in Ottawa. Three were exhibited on a cross -Canada tour and two were sold. "The other one was a gift to my wife Sharon," he says. "She wanted to hold onto one of them." Creighton's main interest is painting wildlife. but he is starting to branch out and explore new subjects "Since moving to the country. I'm fascinated with Huron county," he says, "The woodlots and the old farm buildings and stone houses. I'm getting into more landscapes and I'm interested in the Amish community- their methods of plowing fields with horses- so I'd like to paint them as well. There's a lifetime of painting on this property alone," he says. "I'm inspired by just a 'fleeting moment' and I'd like to be able to capture it. I do a quick sketch and paint at night in my studio." Creighton paints two or three times a week, about two hours each sitting and is now working on a commissioned paint- ing. Most wildlife artists of to -day are super -realists," he says. "They paint every hair, where I try to paint a mood- an impression. There's not too many water- colorists doing wildlife work. but there's some super painters like George McLean. Robert Bateman, Glenn Loates." Last year. Creighton spent a week with Zoltan Szabo. an internationally known watercolorist and landscape painter. "He has helped me combine my landscape work with wildlife," he says. "He had a real influence on me but he didn't change my style. I didn't want to be held down by regulations. 1 wanted to be free -wheeling in my work. Zoltan Szabo showed me shortcuts and ways to improve my work." Creighton's framed paintings cost from $200 to S400. depending on the size of the canvas. He has a ready market. selling from his home to people familiar with his work or through paint- ings he has sold to others. "Painting becomes an obsession." he says. "I want to drop everything and go out and paint. Sometimes, driving to work, 1 see something and I want to stop and paint it.