Wild in Europe app for iPhone and iPad


4.4 ( 7094 ratings )
Lifestyle Book
Developer: Renso Tamse
10.99 USD
Current version: 1.01, last update: 7 years ago
First release : 15 Sep 2011
App size: 285.16 Mb

Follow this leading wildlife-artist and naturalist on his exciting journeys around the world.
This e-book App features more than 150 pages of Renso Tamse’s European wildlife paintings giving the viewer a visual insight into the world of Renso Tamse and his passion for animals and adventure.
Reviewed by many art critics as ‘one of the most inspiring modern wildlife artists’ – the painting are bursting with life and capture the intricate details of wild animals in a unique and breath taking way.

- This ebook uses a specially developed super zoom technology which allows you to zoom in and out with very fast response, thus allowing you to enjoy all the fine details of the art work.
- Beautiful, fast and enjoyable to read on an iPhone or iPad or iPod touch
- No need for a network connection once the App has downloaded
- You can enjoy this magnificent art book wherever you go
- Save the artwork to your photo gallery and set them as wall paper

Coming soon: Facebook, email collaboration

Number of pages: over 150


Biograpy
Renso, who was born and brought up in Rotterdam, was already drawing and painting at the tender age of four. As far back as he can remember, his sole ambition was to be an artist. It was the natural world which most excited his interest. He found that his course at The Academy of Visual Arts, where the teaching was skewed to the abstract and modern, was less than inspiring. What spoke to Renso was realism -hence the impasse. The overriding passion of this urban artist is to capture the mystical resonances of nature in the wild.

In order to understand and experience these wild habitats more profoundly, he is a regular traveller to North America, Great Britain, Switzerland, Germany, Scandinavia and the Pyrenees. The fairytale woods of the Czech Republic likewise count among his favourite destinations; here, the flora and fauna prove to be an inexhaustible source of inspiration. Rensos creative juices can also be stimulated by such details as a tuft of moss, a piece of bark, or the whimsical form of a tree.
In the seemingly commonplace, there often lies an unsuspected and fascinating beauty.
He considers it a challenge to make something captivating out of what appears uninteresting at first sight. In the composition of his paintings, this wildlife artist pays a lot of attention to accurate draughtsmanship in the representation of animals. The anatomy just has to be right. Then I think its at least as important that the painting has life. I try to inject soul into my work. Thats why, after making a sketch, Renso starts with the head of an animal.
He paints in ordinary watercolour on board. First of all, water or a light colour-wash is applied with a sponge. Once dry, this makes the paint easier to work. This technique leads to truly amazing results. In Rensos work, the hand of the artist is instantly recognisable. His paintings richly reward multiple viewing; the artist certainly does not reveal all his secrets at a stroke. A close study of his paintings yields up some surprising discoveries.
Like so many other artists, I have yet to paint my best work. It is this self-criticism that spurs him on to keep tackling new subjects. Renso doesnt load his watercolours with a specific message; he nonetheless entertains the hope that his work as an artist will get people of all ages thinking and they will come to the realisation that the natural world must be protected.