The Bornean orang-utan, pongo pygmaeus - the ‘man of the forest’,

is a species of orang-utan native to the island of Borneo.

 

The conservation status of this remarkable animal is classified as: Endangered Species.

 

Soaring demand for palm oil, an ingredient of Biofuels and one in five products at your

local supermarket, has already led to tropical rain forests being cleared in South-East

Asia at an alarming rate. Large areas are being removed to make room for plantations in

Borneo & Sumatra, not only causing climate change but posing the single greatest threat to

the future of orang-utans in the wild.

 

In the past 20 years, 80% of habitat has been lost to illegal logging, gold mining & the palm

oil industry. Much of this activity is illegal, occurring in national parks that are off limits to loggers,

miners and plantation development. There is also a major problem with the poaching of baby

orang-utans for sale in the pet trade; the trappers killing the  mothers to steal the baby.

 

If the palm oil industry is not regulated, at the current rate of decline by 2012 we may

have witnessed the disappearance of the orang-utan.

 

The drawing, which took 65 hours to complete using Prismacolor pencils on

Risings Stonehenge paper, tells the story of an orphaned orang-utan which was rescued

from a logging site and taken to the Sepilok Orang-utan sanctuary in the state of Sabah.

 

Here, he was trained to survive again in the wild and was eventually released into

Sepilok's orang-utan population achieving total independence. As a fully grown male,

the image shows the powerful, enigmatic ‘man of the forest’,

The Hope of Sepilok, who is just trying to survive into the next decade.

See this drawing at ArtWanted.com

5 Hours Complete

9 Hours Complete

65 Hours Finished

51 Hours Complete

35 Hours Complete

The Hope of Sepilok

S

Special thanks goes to Frans Lanting for the license to use the

original photo ©2007 Frans Lanting / www.lanting.com

 

Adopt an Orphaned Orang-utan Today!

    Lomon                 Kesi                 Grendon

By adopting Lomon, Kesi or Grendon, you are helping to provide the care to not only your orangutan, but all the orangutan     orphans that are looked after at Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation. Each    adoption offers real care to real orphaned orangutans. For as little as £2 a month, you can make a difference to an orangutan.  You CAN give orangutans a future.

15 Hours Complete

15 Hours Complete

Artwork licensed to ©2007 Richard Childs/www.ChumleysArt.com

and Winner of the Founders Prize

for the Best UK Entry in the

UKCPS 6th Annual

Open International

Exhibition 2007

 

Category Winner of the Endangered Wildlife Group and Overall Winner of the

David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation

Wildlife Artist of the Year 2008

 

 

 

Text Box: See photographs of the evening celebrations from the Mall Galleries in London!