This website exhibition presents the work of natural science illustrator Sarah B. Landry. The art of natural science illustration is a celebration of nature in its many forms. Sarah Landry’s work is such a celebration—based on a lifetime of loving observation.
Sarah has illustrated for many clients including: the Audubon Society, the Sierra Club, Peterson Field Guides, Harvard Magazine, Harvard Press; and the Baltimore, New England, Tennessee, and Osaka Aquariums.
Sarah’s work has been exhibited at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, the Boston Museum of Science, and the Harvard Science Center. Her illustration of a feathered dinosaur for Scientific American was the very first published.
Sarah has illustrated for many clients including: the Audubon Society, the Sierra Club, Peterson Field Guides, Harvard Magazine, Harvard Press; and the Baltimore, New England, Tennessee, and Osaka Aquariums.
Sarah’s work has been exhibited at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, the Boston Museum of Science, and the Harvard Science Center. Her illustration of a feathered dinosaur for Scientific American was the very first published.
Biographical note from Sarah Landry: As a child I went out into fields and woods whenever I could, looking for creatures of all kinds. But if I tried to draw anything it was always horses. I never gave much thought to becoming a nature illustrator.
After college I moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts; and enrolled at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. I began illustrating ferns for Dr’s. Rolla and Alice Tryon at Harvard in a section of the campus where biologists and botanists had offices. There I found illustration work for Dr.E. O. Wilson and other scientists.
I now live in British Columbia with my husband, Fred Sexsmith. I am very pleased to now find myself on the Internet.
After college I moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts; and enrolled at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. I began illustrating ferns for Dr’s. Rolla and Alice Tryon at Harvard in a section of the campus where biologists and botanists had offices. There I found illustration work for Dr.E. O. Wilson and other scientists.
I now live in British Columbia with my husband, Fred Sexsmith. I am very pleased to now find myself on the Internet.
Contact: joelandry40@gmail.com