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DRAWING WHAT COMES NATURALLY

Allan Murillo’s collection of bird illustrations includes the species pictured above from left: mochuelo (owlet), Amazonian motmot and red-legged honeycreeper.

ALLAN by Charlene Golojuch MURILLO

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PRECOCIOUS CHILD GROWS INTO ILLUSTRATION CAREER

Photos courtesy of Hidden Garden Art Gallery

Ithought I was in deep trouble when my second-grade teacher demanded a conference with my mother,” remembers Costa Rican artist Allan Murillo. At issue was an illustration that Allan created for a class assignment; it was so well done that the “ of the arts.” Graphic design was his curriculum of choice as a student at the University of Costa Rica Faculty of Fine Arts, from 2004 to 2009. teacher assumed that Allan’s mother must have done the homework for him. Murillo had drawn a shepherdess flower, complete with a cardboard frame. “My favorite type of art is drawing,” Allan says. “I admire the way the line is expressed, the subtlety of a well-done stroke, the purposeful simplicity that

With apprehension growing about the upcoming conference, Allan and his mother arrived at the school. When motivates imagination, the ease, and above all, the feeling of working with the strokes.” confronted with the situation, Allan’s mother simply asked him to draw another picture, right in front of her and the teacher. Amazed with the new drawing, the teacher praised Allan and he passed his assignment with glowing colors. “Although drawing was second nature to me as a child and one of my favorite pastimes,” Murillo tells us, “it wasn’t until I was 17 when my advertising-design teacher fanned the spark to motivate me to follow the path NATURE’S BEAUTY

The sensation of freedom generated by the creative process and the taste for beautiful things in nature, with all its different manifestations, brings boundless inspiration to Allan. Having the good fortune to live in an area with vast arrays of greenery and fauna also aids Murillo to concentrate his illustrations on his featheredfriends. So far he has documented

Stock image depicting three of the artist’s illustrations as they would look framed on a home or office wall (clockwise from bottom): long-tailed manakin, royal flycatcher and magenta-throated hummingbird.

Drawing is Allan Murillo’s favorite form of artistic expression 71 species of birds on the property, so his determination is endless.

“Despite the fact that my art tends to feature the simplistic beauty of birds,” he explains, “after more detailed observation of these animals, I was motivated to begin my own naturalistic illustration project, concentrating on the birds that visited my house. Then I moved on to the never-ending diverse species, and now I have expanded my free rein to the illustration of mammals of Costa Rica.”

Frequent visits with his uncle to the jungle areas in the northern section of San Carlos taught Allan to enjoy the features of the infinite green landscape: listening to the sounds of frogs, birds, rain and wind, feeling the humidity of the moss with his hands and breathing the aroma of mountains.

“These are the sensations that make me feel alive and connected to myself and stimulates my artistic endeavors,” he says.

Calvin & Hobbes cartoonist and watercolorist, Bill Waterson, is held in high esteem by Murillo.

“I love the way he uses the counterform and his ability to present a powerful character in his drawings; it is almost as if they speak for themselves. In addition, Mr. Waterson is a master of watercolor techniques, which when including it in his arts achieves an incomparable effect.”

For more information about Allan Murillo, please visit our website at www. HiddenGardenArt.com or contact us at info@HiddenGardenArt.com.

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