Artists invited to enter state wildlife stamp art contests
Published 3:00 am Sunday, February 25, 2024
- Richard Clifton’s trumpeter swan was the winning entry in the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s 2024 waterfowl stamp art contest. Entries for the 2025 contest will be accepted from Aug. 30 through Sept. 27.
SALEM — Artists are invited to compete in one or all three of the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s 2025 stamp art competitions.
The winning artist in each contest receives a $2,000 award, and the winning artwork is used to produce collector’s stamps and other promotional items with sale proceeds benefitting Oregon’s fish, wildlife, and their habitats.
For more information on contest rules and to order stamps and art prints, go to www.dfw.state.or.us/stamp_contest/index.asp
Entries will be accepted starting Aug. 30, 2024, through Sept. 27, 2024, by 5 p.m., at the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife headquarters, 4034 Fairview Industrial Drive SE, Salem, OR 97302.
Entries can be mailed or hand-delivered. If you hand-deliver your entry, please call ahead to make arrangements, 503-947-6314.
Habitat Conservation Stamp
Art entries must feature a strategy species identified in the Oregon Conservation Strategy in its appropriate habitat.
Not all species in the strategy are eligible, so please use the qualifying list of species.
See contest rules and entry form for more information and a list of eligible species.
https://www.dfw.state.or.us/conservationstrategy/habitat_conservation_stamp.asp
Waterfowl Stamp Contest
Art entries must feature one of the following species in its natural habitat setting: ring-necked duck, white-winged scoter, or Barrow’s goldeneye. See contest rules and entry form for more information.
https://www.dfw.state.or.us/resources/hunting/waterfowl/contest/index.asp
Upland Game Bird Stamp Contest
Art entries must feature California quail in its natural habitat setting. See contest rules and entry form for more information.
https://www.dfw.state.or.us/resources/hunting/upland_bird/contest/index.asp
A panel will judge artwork based on artistic composition, anatomical accuracy of the species and general appeal.
Collector’s stamps, art prints and other promotional materials are produced from first-place artwork.
Proceeds from product sales are used for habitat improvement, research surveys and conservation projects.
Interested artists are encouraged to visit ODFW’s stamp art competition webpage for more information on the contests and to view entries from previous years.