PAINTING - CRABEATER SEAL

c. 1975
Subcollections
Overview

Painting of two grey/fawn seals, with spotted underside and dog like snout, gouache on blue card, framed and mounted with inscription (95).

Historical information

Collection of 106 of paintings by Richard Ellis that were selected by the Smithsonian Institution to form a traveling exhibit of the marine mammals of the world. The collection was purchased by Perth businessman Kevin Parry in 1985 and donated to Whale World, now known as Albany's Historic Whaling Station.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-128-RE1999.370
Item type
Width
410 mm
Height or length
440 mm
Depth
15 mm
Weight
1.52 kg
Inscriptions and markings

CRABEATER SEAL (Lobodon carcinophagus)

The crabeater is the most plentiful of all pinnipeds, and probably the most abundant large mammal in the world. Various studies have produced figures that range from 15 million to 75 million seals. Carcinophagus means "crab-eater," but this seal feeds primarily on the small euphausiid shrimp, the "krill" that is also eaten by the baleen whales.
95.

Verso: Smithsonian label checklist # 95 Packing case # 5, AWHS accession number

Contextual information

The paintings represent a body of work by well-known American marine conservationist, author, artist and natural historian Richard Ellis (1938-2024).

Place made
United States
Year
Primary significance criteria
Artistic or aesthetic significance
Scientific or research significance
Comparative significance criteria
Object’s condition or completeness
Rare or representative
Well provenanced
Last modified
Wednesday, 15 October, 2025
Completeness
100
Permissions

Reproduction or publication with Albany’s Historic Whaling Station permission only.

Albany's Historic Whaling Station

Albany's Historic Whaling Station

Painting of two grey/fawn seals, with spotted underside and dog like snout, on blue card with inscription.

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