| Now living in the U.S., Hillier was
born in Buckinghamshire, England, in 1958 and grew up near Windsor Castle. Drawing and
painting animals is something he has loved to do since he was a child. Hilliers
father was a museum designer who taught his son the rudiments of painting with watercolor,
a medium Hillier used during his years as an illustrator, along with gouache. In recent
years, when he made the transition from an illustrator to a wildlife artist, he also
switched to acrylic because it involves a looser painting process.
Traveling widely in search of subjects to study and paint, Hillier has visited Africa
several times (where he was charged by an angry elephant), India, other parts of Europe
and Southeast Asia. He loves the big cats and rhinos and finds himself drawn to water
birds. Since moving to the States, he has begun painting North American subjects in
addition to the dramatic African and bird subjects for which he is renowned.
When doing field research, Hillier sketches and also takes photographs, finding that
while the photos are very useful for details of color, shape, background and texture,
sketching forces him to "observe in a way that I dont when I take a
photograph...I need the observation that comes from sketching. Its how I get to feel
the subject."
Hillier studied at Dyfed College of Art in Carmarthen, West Wales, graduating with
distinction. Three of his paintings were accepted by the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition,
and he has exhibited regularly at the Pastel Society, the Society of Wildlife Artists,
where he is a council member, The Royal Institute and the Miniature Society, as well as
the Paris Salon, the Royal Society of Marine Artists and the Biarritz Salon. A member of
the Society of Animal Artists, his work is part of their traveling exhibition. He has
participated in Christies Wildlife Art Auction, and his work has also been included
in Leigh Yawkey Woodsons touring show of "Birds in Art." He has had
one-man exhibitions throughout Great Britain and has illustrated several books. In 1995,
he won the World Wildlife Fund Fine Art Award. In 1998 he received The Peoples
Choice
Award from The Florida Wildlife and Western Art Expo, and in both 1997 and 1998 he
received The Society of Animal Artists Award of Excellence.
A regular contributor to the Guinness Book of Records illustrating the wildlife
section, Hillier recently spent two years illustrating The Rhinoceros, a monograph
published by Basilisk Press. This entailed traveling to Africa and Sumatra to study
rhinos, after which he produced 20 large plates of portraits and paintings of five species
of rhino, in addition to behavioral sketches. Rhinos are, he says, "wonderful
subjects to paint."
The love Hillier feels for his subject is evident in his work. He will, as he says,
"paint anything that moves. I paint animals because I love animals, and part of
loving animals is being concerned about whats happening to species in the
wild." |