Julie Zickefoose | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | American |
Education | Harvard University 1976- 1981, B.A. biological anthropology |
Occupation(s) | Writer, Biologist, Bird Artist, Blogger |
Notable work | Baby Birds: An Artist Looks Into the Nest (2016) |
Spouse | Bill Thompson III (deceased) |
Children | 2 |
Julie Zickefoose (July 24, 1958) is an American nature book writer, biologist, bird artist, and blogger.
Born in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Zickefoose has been drawing birds since childhood. The bird artist Robert Verity Clem (1933-2010) encouraged her to draw living birds in nature. She describes the work of Lars Jonsson as one of her main influences.
After studying art, anthropology and biology from 1976, she obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard University in 1981. While a student, she spent five months as a field biology assistant in Amazonian Brazil. She worked during the summers from 1981 to 1986 as a field biologist for the Nature Conservancy in Connecticut. She was commissioned as part of the illustrator team for the American Ornithologists' Union and the Academy of Natural Sciences for the eighteen-volume work Birds of North America from 1991 to 2002. She has also illustrated educational material for the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center.
Zickefoose has presented her lectures and illustrations at universities, museums, galleries and festivals throughout the United States. Her articles and illustrations have been published in a variety of journals, including The New Yorker , Smithsonian Magazine , Country Journal , and Bird Watcher's Digest , for which she has designed 17 title covers. She was married to an editor of the latter journal, William Henry Thompson III (1962–2019), from 1993 until his death in March 2019, and has a daughter and a son.
Zickefoose's early books dealt with birdwatching in the backyard. The guide Enjoying Bluebirds More from 1993 offers birdwatchers assistance in creating bird boxes for bluebirds and includes illustrations and colour photographs. Enjoying Bird Feeding More: Great Ideas for Your Backyard is a guide from 1995, that includes tips for feeding birds in the garden and attracting birds. Enjoying Woodpeckers More from 2003 is a guide to identifying woodpeckers.
In 2006, Zickefoose published Letters from Eden: A Year at Home, in the Woods, a compilation of columns she wrote for Bird Watcher's Digest. Arranged by seasons, the essays describe her daily excursions and observations of wild turkeys, box turtles, coyotes and other animals from the forests of her home country.
The book The Bluebird Effect: Uncommon Bonds with Common Birds was published in 2012. Illustrated by Zickefoose with 216 paintings and sketches, this work reports on 25 species of birds that she has observed in different seasons around her 80 acre sanctuary near Whipple in the southern Appalachian Mountains of Ohio. Each chapter deals with one bird species, including the little tern, the northern cardinal, the Savannah sparrow, the scarlet tanager, the orchard oriole, the common starling, the piping plover, the turkey vulture, the barn swallow, the eastern phoebe, the ivory-billed woodpecker and some endangered species. It also contains stories about the rehabilitation of injured birds and diary entries in which Zickefoose describes her observations. In the book she also tells her seven-year study of Mr. Troyer, the namesake bluebird, who has fathered 53 chicks despite an injured wing caused by the attack of a falcon.
In addition to North American birds, Zickefoose also illustrates Neotropical species.
A black tupelo in the Dawes Arboretum was dedicated to Julie Zickefoose in 2014.
In January 2021, Zickefoose began working with a team to bring back Bird Watcher's Digest magazine. Its first issue appeared in July 2022 with her painting of a Henslow's sparrow on the cover.
The bluebirds are a North American group of medium-sized, mostly insectivorous or omnivorous birds in the order of Passerines in the genus Sialia of the thrush family (Turdidae). Bluebirds are one of the few thrush genera in the Americas.
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