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Nobumichi Tamura/Stocktrek Images Wall Art

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14 Items
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Dinopithecus Ingens Fine Art Print
Dinopithecus Ingens
32" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Calymene Blumenbachii Fine Art Print
Calymene Blumenbachii
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Iberomesornis Romerali Fine Art Print
Iberomesornis Romerali
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Megantereon Cultridens Fine Art Print
Megantereon Cultridens
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Proceratosaurus Dinosaur Fine Art Print
Proceratosaurus Dinosaur
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Psittacosaurus Lujiatunensi Fine Art Print
Psittacosaurus Lujiatunensi
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Saurolophus Dinosaur Fine Art Print
Saurolophus Dinosaur
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Sinornithosaurus Dinosaur Fine Art Print
Sinornithosaurus Dinosaur
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Styracosaurus Dinosaur Fine Art Print
Styracosaurus Dinosaur
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Tsintaosaurus Dinosaur Fine Art Print
Tsintaosaurus Dinosaur
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Velociraptor Mongoliensis Fine Art Print
Velociraptor Mongoliensis
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Triceratops Dinosaur 1 Fine Art Print
Triceratops Dinosaur 1
25" x 18"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $51.99
Archaeopteryx Lithographica Fine Art Print
Archaeopteryx Lithographica
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
Troodon Dinosaur Fine Art Print
Troodon Dinosaur
33" x 25"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $86.99
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14 Items
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Nobumichi Tamura also known simply as NobuTamura is a paleoartist who was born in France. He has created more than 1,500 Creative drawings of dinosaurs (Commons-licensed) and other prehistoric animals. Many of his art are hosted on Wikimedia Commons. His reconstruction of a juvenile Rubeosaurus attracted huge audience. This was a ceratopsian dinosaur from the Cretaceous period. Working at the Berkeley National Laboratory, Tamura recounts in the piece, when he first started to explore the topic in Wikipedia about 10 years ago, he set to work when he was struck by the absence of illustrations. He says that it wasn’t always an easy sailing. This was partly because paleontology has seen many advances over the past few decades that have deeply changed views of what these prehistoric animals looked like in life. His first drawings were not really successful, because he just drew the dinosaurs like he saw them when he was a kid.

They weren't quite accurate and were imprecise enough that his early drawings were rejected by Wikipedia editors and they were removed from their site. Rather than finding a new hobby or giving up all together, he just worked smarter and harder, soliciting feedback from the editors of Wikipedia on how he could better render these extinct species. He also read the latest scientific articles describing the extinct animals he was working on and started sketching. As time went by his art got better and better. To date, Tamura has illustrated close to 2000 dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals and a good number of his illustrations continue to be in use.
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