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| Basenji - Tri Custom Dog Art Oil Painting |
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Welcome to Roberta C. Collectable gifts for dog lovers. We specialize in dog art including Basenji - Tri Custom Dog Art Oil Painting, dog prints, dog breed prints, limited edition print, tee shirts, sweatshirts. We also offer custom dog portraits in oil from your favorite photograph. The folowing Basenji - Tri Custom Dog Art Oil Painting for those who love the breed: Basenji - Tri is a Custom Dog Art Oil Painting that you will cherrish and display proudly.
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Pricing for: Basenji - Tri Custom Dog Art Oil Painting
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| | Each Additional Dog |
| | 8" x 10" | $400 | | $100 |
| | 12" x 16" | $650 | | $150 |
| | 18" x 24" | $750 | | $150 |
| | 20" x 24" | $850 | | $200 |
| | 24" x 36" | $1200 | | $200 |
| | 30" x 40" | $1500 | | $200 |
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A Sample of Roberta's Work Click on Pictures to Enlarge
Original Supplied Pictures
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Finished Artwork
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Interesting Breed information about Breed: Basenji - Tri
The Basenji is a breed of dog considered by some, particularly in North America, to be a member of the sighthound family; most kennel clubs, including the American Kennel Club and the Kennel Club of the United Kingdom classify it as a hound. The Basenji is a Congolese hunting dog that rarely (if ever) barks, but does produce an unusual yodel-like sound. In behavior and temperament they have some commonalities with cats.
Appearance Basenjis are small, elegant-looking, short-haired dogs with erect ears, a tightly curled tail, and a graceful neck. Some people consider their appearance similar to that of a miniature deer. A Basenji's forehead is wrinkled, especially when the animal is young. Its eyes are typically almond shaped, giving the dog the appearance of squinting.
Basenjis typically weigh around 20 to 24 pounds (9 to 11 kg) and stand about 17 inches (43 cm) tall at the withers. They are athletic dogs, deceptively powerful for their size. They have a graceful, confident gait like a trotting horse, and skim the ground in a double-suspension gallop when running flat-out at their top speed.
The AKC recognizes the following colorations: red/white, black/white, tricolor (red/black/white), and brindle/white. There are additional variations, such as the trindle, which is a tricolor and brindle, and several other colorations exist in the Congo.
Temperament Like wild canids, Basenjis do not bark. They will, however, give the occasional single woof. They also chortle, whine, squeal, and make a Basenji-specific noise called a yodel or a baroo. Also like wild canids, most Basenjis breed only once a year, usually in the autumn.
The Basenji is as fastidious as a cat about its personal grooming, even washing itself with its paws.
Most Basenjis, like cats, have a strong dislike for contact with water, and will go to great lengths to avoid getting wet. On the other hand, they are extremely inquisitive dogs, and can temporarily be completely oblivious to the pouring rain if something piques their interest.
Basenjis are highly intelligent and learn quickly, but they also have a cat-like independence and self-motivation which can make them somewhat casual about obedience. A healthy Basenji is a mischievous and good-humored animal, and is not above testing the limits of its environment and owner just for sport. They can be aloof with strangers but form strong bonds with their owners. If not supervised or trained properly, Basenjis can become bored and destructive when left alone. Basenjis are also expert climbers, and have been known to scale chain-link fences as much as eight feet high. Basenjis also have a very strong sense of territory, and they consider their home plus the whole area where they are regularly walked as their territory. Because of this, they can be very hostile towards other dogs in those areas.
Quick and fast on their feet, Basenjis love to run and chase, so much so that they are sometimes competitively run in lure courses. There are few creatures the Basenji is likely to encounter (including its owner!) that it does not believe it can outwit or outrun. This, combined with the breed's typically fearless approach to the world, makes it a good idea not to allow a Basenji to run free in an unconfined area or where it may get into trouble. Being hit by a car is one of the most common causes for the early demise of a Basenji. Due to their high prey drive and their fearless approach to the world, they do not view traffic as a threat.
History Tri-colored BrindleThe Basenji is one of the most ancient dog breeds. Originating on the continent of Africa, it has been venerated by humans for thousands of years. Basenjis can be seen on steles in the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs, sitting at the feet of their masters, looking just as they do today, with pricked ears and tightly curled tail.
The Basenji had almost totally disappeared from the West when Europeans came across it in the Congo in 1895. There, the Basenji was prized by locals for its intelligence, courage, speed, and silence. They were assistants to the hunt, chasing wild game into nets for their masters. The Azande and Mangbetu people from the northeastern Congo region describe Basenjis, in the local Lingala language, as mbwá na bas?´nzi. Translated, this means “dogs of the savages”, or “dogs of the villagers”. The word bas?´nzi itself is the plural form of mos?´nzi which is a deformation of the French insult once used to describe illiterate indigenous Africans: mon singe (meaning “my monkey”). In Kiswahili, another Bantu language, from East Africa, mbwa shenzi translates to “wild dog”. Another local name is m’bwa m’kube m’bwa wamwitu, or “jumping up and down dog”, a reference to their tendency to jump straight up to spot their quarry. However, it should also be noted that in Arabic, dogs from Africa were referred to as 'be'zenji', meaning 'of the tribe of blacks', while during colonial times the term 'shenzi' (Swahili: 'wild' or 'savage' via Arabic 'Zanj' meaning 'black African') was a derogatory term that could be applied to anything shoddy or native, but was used particularly to refer to native dogs (as in 'Shenzi dogs'). (See also Zanj and shenzi).
Several attempts were made to bring the breed to England, but the earliest imports succumbed to disease. It was not until the 1930s that foundation stock was successfully established in England, and thence to the United States by animal importer Henry Trefflich. So it is that nearly all the Basenjis in the Western world are descended from these few original imports. The breed was officially accepted into the AKC in 1943. For a fascinating account of the importation of the Basenji from Africa, read The History of the Breed[1], a letter to the AKC in support of opening the stud book to admit new African imports. The AKC stud book was reopened to several new imports in 1990 at the request of the Basenji Club of America.
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Additional Breeds for: Custom Dog Art Oil Painting
Affenpinscher Afghan Hound Airedale Terrier Akita Alaskan Malamute American Eskimo Dog American Staffordshire Terrier American Water Spaniel Australian Cattle Dog Blue Red Australian Shepherd Blue Merle Tri Red Merle Red Australian Terrier Basenji Red Tri Basset Hound Beagle Bearded Collie Bedlington Terrier Belgian Malinois Belgian Sheepdog Belgian Tervuren Bernese Mountain Dog Bichon Frise Black & Tan Coonhound Bloodhound Border Collie Border Terrier Borzoi Boston Terrier Boston Terrier Bouvier Des Flandres Black Grey Fawn Boxer Fawn Brindle Briard Brittany Brussels Griffon Brussels Griffon (smooth) Bulldog Bulldog Bullmastiff Bull Terrier White Brindle Cairn Terrier Canaan Dog Catahoula Leopard Dog Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Blenheim Tri Ruby Black & Tan Chesapeake Bay Retriever Chihuahua Chihuahua (long-coated) Chihuahua (smooth-coated) Chinese Crested Hairless Powder Puff Chinese Shar-pei Chow Chow Clumber Spaniel Cocker Spaniel (american) Buff Black Parti Collie Collie (rough) Collie (blue Merle) Collie (smooth) Curly-coated Retriever Dachshund (red) Dachshund (black & Tan) Dachshund (longhair) Dachshund (wirehair) Dalmatian Dandie Dinmont Terrier Doberman Pinscher Doberman Pinscher (black & Tan) Doberman Pinscher (red) Dogue De Bordeaux English Cocker Spaniel English Toy Spaniel English Setter English Springer Spaniel Field Spaniel Finnish Spitz Flat-coated Retriever French Bulldog German Shepherd German Shorthaired Pointer German Wirehaired Pointer Giant Schnauzer Golden Retriever Gordon Setter Great Dane (brindle) Great Dane (fawn) Great Dane Great Dane (black) Great Dane (blue) Great Dane (harliquin) Great Dane (mantle) Great Pyrenees Greater Swiss Mountain Dog Greyhound (fawn) Greyhound (brindle) Havanese Black & White Cream Ibizan Hound Irish Setter Irish Terrier Irish Water Spaniel Irish Wolfhound Italian Greyhound Grey & White Red Jack Russell Terrier Smooth Wire Japanese Chin Keeshond Kerry Blue Terrier Komondor Kuvasz Labrador Retriever (yellow) Labrador Retriever (black) Labador Retriever (chocolate) Lakeland Terrier Lhasa Apso Lowchen Maltese Manchester Terrier Mastiff Fawn Brindle Miniature Pinscher Red Black & Tan Miniature Schnauzer Neapolitan Mastiff Newfoundland Norfolk Terrier Norwegian Elkhound Norwich Terrier Old English Sheepdog Otterhound Papillon Red Black & White Pekingese Petit Basset Griffon Vendeen Pharaoh Hound Pointer Pomeranian Red Black Poodle (standard) Black Brown White Poodle (miniature) Poodle (toy) Portuguese Water Dog Pug Fawn Black Puli Rat Terrier Rhodesian Ridgeback Rottweiler Saint Bernard Saluki Samoyed Schipperke Scottish Deerhound Scottish Terrier Sealyham Terrier Shetland Sheepdog Sable Tri Blue Merle Shiba Inu Shih Tzu Shih Tzu Siberian Husky Silky Terrier Skye Terrier Smooth Fox Terrier Soft-coated Wheaten Terrier Staffordshire Bull Terrier Sussex Spaniel Tibetan Spaniel Tibetan Terrier Vizsla Weimaraner Welsh Corgi Welsh Corgi (black & Tan) Welsh Corgi (fawn) Welsh Corgi (cardigan) Welsh Springer Spaniel Welsh Terrier West Highland Terrier West Highland Terrier Whippet Wire Fox Terrier Yorkshire Terrier Yorkshire Terrier Yorkshire Terrier
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