When Page Nethercutt was 8, he used the skills he learned from his
taxidermist father Gerald to enter a squirrel in a school science fair.
He won a blue ribbon, but not the overall best of show.
He didn’t consider it the end of his world and continued to hone his skills.
Nethercutt,
now 41, is not sure whatever became of the science fair winner, but
television viewers will have the chance Thursday to see his vision of a
real “End of the World” moment in nature when he is featured on a new
AMC series entitled “The Immortalizer.”
Nethercutt, who took
over his father’s business and reopened it as Moore Swamp Taxidermy in
Pamlico County in 1994, is one of four taxidermist chosen for the
eight-part reality show.
“The basis of the show is a competition
between what they called ‘The Immortalizer,’ who they consider their
master taxidermist versus a challenger,” he said.
He was first
approached by the network more than a year ago and after four days of
filming at his shop and more production time in Hollywood, he is The
Immortalizer in the Thursday episode. The filming included Nethercutt
working on the piece, interviews and some scenes of him and his family
around their beehives and aviary on Moore Swamp Road near Reelsboro.
Last week, he attended a huge press party in New York City.
Nethercutt
will be featured in two of the eight shows. Contractually, he can only
talk about the first show with the quail and bobcat, set in a southwest
United States scene. It includes a small habitat.
“It is something you add to represent the natural ground effects — dirt, trees and bushes — for color,wind turbine to give it an artsy flow,” he said. “We want to see circles in the piece so that as your eye looks at the animal,The stone mosaic series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics. it moves around to another point and back to the animal.”
“Your
eye basically wants to come back to the quail, because he is the theme
of the show,” he said. “He is scared out of his mind. He has his mouth
open,We offers custom Injection Mold
parts in as fast as 1 day. screaming. His eyes are bugged out and his
foot is slamming against the cat’s leg, trying to push away from him.”
The
bobcat’s jaws are wide open, with the quail’s wing is slapping his
whiskers, making that side of the cat’s face squint, with one eye
half-closed.
“This is a split-second in time,” Nethercutt said. “This is a predator-prey scene.”
He
decided not to go with traditionally mass-produced pedestals for the
scene, instead commissioning Bayboro cabinet maker Steve Ballenger, who
hand-selected the wood to match the colors of the animal and bird.
The
piece is the property of AMC and is still in Hollywood, although it
will be returned. But, Nethercutt cannot sell or give it away.
“We’ll
find a place to put it,” he said of his shop showroom, which features
his personal collection of birds and animals. At home, he and his wife
Bonnie have 98 more mounts.
There is no source for mount material and it would have to be constructed by hand. But,Professionals with the job title Mold Maker are on LinkedIn. more importantly, he said that a pet is impossible to create authentically.
“There
is a look in that dog or cat’s eye that we can’t duplicate in glass,”
he said. “A dog or cat can make some facial expressions and we cannot
capture that to that owner’s liking, so therefore they are always going
to be disappointed.”
He will do pet birds. Despite having personality, they have no facial muscles.
Page also works as a judge in other states for taxidermy competitions and has produced how-to videos.
Page’s father Gerald was a self-taught taxidermist, who opened Gerald’s Taxidermy in 1963 and retired in 1987.
The
family has deep roots in the remote area where they live. Page’s
grandfather, Rex Potter, bought a farm from the Moore family. When the
county 911 emergency address systems were enacted, it was named Moore
Swamp Road.
As a youngster growing into manhood, he worked in
the taxidermy studio to pay his way on hunting trips out west. He also
toiled on his grandfather’s farm and did some work as a commercial
fisherman.
After high school, he joined the Air Force and spent four years in Montana.
“That’s where I got heavier into taxidermy,” he said. “When it was time to re-enlist, I decided to go into taxidermy.”
He has since won many awards for his creative waterfowl, along with African and North American mammals.Source crystal mosaic Products at Mosaics. He is one of just 15 designated master taxidermists by the North Carolina Taxidermy Association.
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