Stephen Lyman was an explorer who specialized in painting the most elusive moments in
nature with a quiet realism. Inspired by the writing and teachings of famous naturalist John
Muir, Lyman was a "naturalist artist" who painted from his experience of both the deep
wilderness and the wildlife which inhabits the serene sky and remote forest and mountainous
landscape.
Lyman's commitment to the wilderness was fostered by a childhood spent in the Pacific
Northwest, where hiking in Snake River country was a frequent family ritual; he also
intuitively knew that he was an artist.
After studying commercial art at the Art Center School of Design in Pasadena, Lyman
began his career as a commercial illustrator in Los Angeles but soon discovered that the call of
the wild was stronger than the lure of the city. Returning to Idaho, he spent two years
exploring and developing his own style of painting and living in a simple natural manner.
Striving for a natural balance at the source, his harmonious lifestyle and treks into the
wilderness added clarity to his painting. "All my paintings have their origins in my experience
and perception of beauty in the wilderness."
Lyman died in a 1996 hiking accident in Yosemite National Park, one of the places he
most loved to be. Love of life, family and the wilderness was the very essence of the artist, and
his legacy lives on in the steady fire of his art.
Collected nationwide, Lyman was a regular participant in the annual by-invitation-only
show at the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, and was named "Artist of the Year" by the
Snake Lake Nature Center Foundation for the 1991 Pacific Rim Wildlife Art Show.
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