Mad Bluebird Puzzle  ( Mad Bluebird Puzzle )

Watson's Wildlife Art Gallery, Laurel Delaware 1-888-723-9217
Home Page Check Out  Win a Print Contact Us Affiliate Program View Cart

 

 

 

 


The Mad Bluebird Puzzle

Mad Bluebird Puzzle

( Mad Bluebird Puzzle )

Have immensely entertaining time with for family putting together the notorious cranky
bluebird from Michael L. Smiths renowned photograph " The Mad Bluebird ".
1,000 pieces; 19" x 28".

Sold Out

 

 

More photos & Products from Michael L. Smith

Mad Bluebird Sculpture

 

 

The Mad Bluebirds Grandson
24 Generations Later 

Mad Bluebird Puzzle
Mad Bluebird Puzzle

Sold Out


The Mad Bluebird Coasters

The Mad Bluebird photo
The Mad Bluebird
Photo


The Mad Bluebird Vase

 

mad bluebird mug ,the mad bluebird mugs , THE MAD BLUE BIRD mug , The Mad Blue Bird mugs
The Mad Bluebird Mugs

Birds Of A Feather
Hand Carving

The Mad Bluebird

Birds Of
A Feather

Is Dinner Ready Yet

 

The Mad Bluebirds Mate

The Mad Bluebirds Mate


The Mad Bluebird Flag

 

Yes, She Ate The Last Mealworm

Snowy Egret
by Michael L. Smith

Morning Landing
by Michael L. Smith

Ducks In Wood
by Michael L. Smith

 Morning Dove With Young  by Artist Michael L. Smith
Morning Dove With Young
 

 Red Shouldered Hawk   by Artist Michael L. Smith
Red Shouldered Hawk


The Mad Bluebird Plate

 Evening Wings ( Egret )  by Artist Michael L. Smith
Evening Wings

 

Least Terns by Michael L. Smith

Least Terns
by Michael L. Smith

 Great Blue Heron ( Portrait )  by Artist Michael L. Smith
Great Blue Heron Portrait

Family Portrat
Family Portrait

Spring Chill ( Great Blue Heron )  by Artist Michael L. Smith
Spring Chill

 Snow Storm ( Canada Geese )  by Artist Michael L. Smith
Snow Storm

 

The Bluebirds Brats

Mad Bluebirds Brats

 The Mad Bluebird

Bluebird Chorus

 The Mad Bluebird

Move Over

 The Mad Bluebird

Country Bluebird

 

 

Story Of The Mad Bluebird
By Lisa Pollak/The Baltimore Sun

    Picture of a bluebird, that's all he was after. Not money and fame, not admirers and accolades, not the chance to quit his day job and take pictures full-time. Photographing birds was his passion; it always would be. One good shot out of 100 was worth it.   And so it was that on a cold February day in 1979, Michael L. Smith set up a tripod in his back yard, pointed his camera toward a fence post and waited.   And waited.   And waited.

    He wasn't trying to change his life. He wasn't trying to buy the house of his dreams. He wasn't trying to become Michael Smith, the guy who took that bluebird photo.   He was just trying to take a photo of a bluebird.   And here came his chance. A male Eastern bluebird flew into the back yard and landed on the fence post. It hunkered down. It fluffed up its feathers. It fixed its black beady eyes on the long lens of the camera.   Sixty feet away, Smith couldn't see any of this. He sat in his house, holding a remote camera trigger, watching the bluebird through a glass door.  All he could see was that the bird was facing the camera.   Click.   The bird flew away. The man went on with his life. Neither, it seems safe to say, had any idea what they'd done.   More than 20 years later, Smith still can't entirely believe it.   If you owed your fortune to a bird, you might not either.

    As it turned out, that was no ordinary bluebird. It was a grumpy bluebird. A ticked-off, glowering, down-in-the-beak bluebird. Or so it appeared to humans, and that's what mattered, because at last count humans have bought more than 102,000 signed prints of "The Mad Bluebird" -- a phenomenal number by most photographers' standards.     In other words, a man who has spent his life taking intimate portraits of birds -- a photographer who has slept in duck blinds, spent 13 years of summer weekends documenting the habits of a single osprey and crawled through his yard with a blanket over his head to avoid disturbing his subjects -- achieved his greatest success with a photo he didn't especially like the first time he saw it and still doesn't list among his very best.
   

    "It has put me in a whole new world financially," says Smith, "I was an electrician for 32 years, and I made good money, but nothing like this."   When he says it, he doesn't sound like he's gloating. He sounds proud, grateful and still plenty stunned. When Smith moved into his new home in fall 1998, a copy of "The Mad Bluebird" was the first possession over the threshold; today, a giant print above the kitchen table reminds him every day who he has to thank. He feels indebted to the bird not just for his home, but also for his girlfriend, Marci Krishnamoorthy, whom he met while delivering prints to the nature store where she worked.   Despite the volume of prints sold, Smith still signs each one by hand -- he bought a signature machine, but it felt too impersonal.
   
    There you have it. But what difference does it make? That once-anonymous bluebird -- who bird sources say surely died years ago -- has become "The Mad Bluebird." He has attained a level of fame that few humans can hope for.



Home | Glossary of Art and Gallery Terms
  Join Our News Letter List | About Wetlands and Conservation
Continue Browsing

Home Page Check Out  Win a Print  Email Us Affiliate Program View Cart

Internet Prices & Availability
Because the art market is constantly in a state of instability, with new releases coming out and other ones selling out,  We will try to this site as up to date as  possible on  price changes and when art sells out. Prices and availability of artwork do change overnight sometimes and very unexpectedly, so there is no way to guarantee that the piece you ordered on our web site is available. We will always contact you and refund you immediately if there is a problem. There is a 20% Restocking Fee.

Celebrating 43 Years in Business



All materials Copyright © 1967-2009 Watson's Wildlife Art Gallery,Inc, Artwork appearing on this page may not be reproduced in whole or in part without the express written consent of Watson's Wildlife Art Gallery or its clients. All original artworks are credited and copyrighted separately.