Wild ducks coast toward a landing in a river's backwater in Terry Redlin's "Apple River Mallards." Deer cautiously pick their way through new snow in his "Back from the Fields." Canada geese soar over a creek as the afternoon mist blankets the hillside in "Hazy Afternoon."
Dementia had stilled his paintbrushes since 2007, but Redlin's art — with scenes of rural landscapes lit by the setting sun, wildlife and nature — still resonates with myriad fans nostalgic for rural America.
Redlin, who grew from modest beginnings to become one of the country's most prolific and acclaimed wildlife artists, died Sunday at a care center in Watertown, S.D. He was 78.
Although he painted his originals in oil, his work has been reproduced in limited-edition prints, posters, coffee mugs, jigsaw puzzles and knickknacks.
Redlin was named "most popular artist" for nine years running — from 1990 to 1999 — by U.S. Art magazine from a nationwide survey of art galleries.
He won the Minnesota Duck Stamp competition in 1981 and 1985 and the Minnesota Bass Stamp competition in 1982. He won three lithograph of the year awards from the National Association of Limited Edition Dealers. He donated art to Ducks Unlimited that raised more than $28 million for wetland conservation. In Sioux Falls, S.D., an elementary school was named after him.
More than 150 of his original paintings — as well as prints, sketches and childhood drawings — can be seen at the Redlin Art Center in Watertown, his hometown. More than 3 million people have visited the center since it opened in 1997.
"His legacy will be a lifetime of art that touches people's hearts," said Julie Ranum, the center's executive director.