Hog Island snail
/The same snail (I believe), noticed on a rotting log one afternoon (top), then found in the grass a few feet away the following morning (bottom)
The same snail (I believe), noticed on a rotting log one afternoon (top), then found in the grass a few feet away the following morning (bottom)
Anomia simplex (Anomiidae), a bivalve mollusk
Callinectes sapidus (Portunidae), a malacostracan crustacean
Pinus rigida (Pinaceae), a coniferous gymnosperm
A glimpse into my recent art residency, via Instagram posts. Each post contains multiple images that you can scroll through laterally without leaving this page. (If you do end up on Instagram, look for more sketches under Stories!) Other versions of this art collection can be found on Twitter, on Facebook, and in my gallery-in-progress.
Click either tweet below to see a 13-part Twitter thread from my art residency on the Isles of Shoals in the Gulf of Maine. More posts on Instagram, Facebook, and my art gallery.
Lobster wave🦞 goodbye to the stupendous students, faculty, and staff @ShoalsMarineLab. #artistinresidence pic.twitter.com/2mSCUXZRsJ
— Abby McBride (@sketchbiologist) August 5, 2021
Bonus tweet that I forgot to put in the thread!
Gull in reverse @ShoalsMarineLab pic.twitter.com/90AGR1TnSx
— Abby McBride (@sketchbiologist) August 4, 2021
Abby McBride
SKETCH BIOLOGIST
Contact: abbymcb@alum.mit.edu
© Abby McBride 2014-2024