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Tillamook Cheddar (dog)

Tillamook Cheddar
Other name(s) Tillie
Species Dog
Breed Jack Russell Terrier
Sex Female
Born January 17, 1999
Greenwich, Connecticut
Died January 29, 2014(2014-01-29) (aged 15)
Notable role Artist
Owner F. Bowman Hastie III
Named after Tillamook Cheddar
http://www.tillamookcheddar.com/

Tillamook Cheddar (January 17, 1999 - January 29, 2014; Tillie for short) was a Jack Russell terrier dog from Greenwich, Connecticut, who has acquired a reputation as an artist. She had work on display at the National Arts Club, collaborating on pieces that were shown with human artists such as Tom Sachs and Dirk Westphal.

A 16-pound (7.25 kg) Jack Russell terrier with a white coat and brown and black markings on her face, she is named for Tillamook Cheddar, a brand of cheese produced in the U.S. state of Oregon. She lives in the Clinton Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, with her owner, F. Bowman Hastie III, a freelance writer and editor. Hastie, who grew up in Oregon, served as her agent, publicist, and manager.

Hastie received Tillamook Cheddar as a 30th birthday gift from his mother, picking her out of a litter in Greenwich, Connecticut. Hastie first noted her presumed artistic inclinations when she was six months of age; while he was sitting on his couch writing on a legal pad, she jumped up and began scratching at the pad. Believing that she was attempting to communicate in some way, he affixed a sheet of carbon paper to the pad and she scratched her first image.

In 2004 Parade Magazine described her as "Best New Artist" and in 2005 The Art Newspaper said she was "the most successful living animal painter".

Art critic Michael Mills of the New Times Broward-Palm Beach said:

But to address a nagging question, do Tillie's scratchings and bitings add up to art? Not to my way of thinking, and here's why. To qualify as a work of art, at least in these postmodern times, a thing must be created with intent, and animals are not capable of intent in the same way humans are.

Mills also quoted Jerry Saltz of The Village Voice who called the work a "sham".


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