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Archive for the ‘botanical art’ Category

© 1998 by Julie Schneider Ljubenkov. All rights reserved

California artist and educator, Julie Schneider Ljubenkov, lost her home, her studio, and a lifetime inventory of art in the firestorms that ravaged the San Diego area in October 2007. Since then, she has been busy rebuilding all aspects of her life literally from the ground up.

On Tuesday December 15, 2009, in conjunction with the San Diego chapter of the Native Plant Society, Julie will celebrate the holidays by celebrating native gardens and plants. At the holiday gathering of CNPS members, there will be live music and a selection of limited edition prints of botanical watercolor paintings available for sale, including a print of Julie’s painting of Munz’s Hedgehog Cactus (see image). This is a rare species of cactus threatened by off-road vehicles and cactus collectors. Six copies of this 17″ x 23″ print were donated by The Southern California Academy of Sciences and will be available for purchase (framed, $350; unframed, $250). Also available will be limited edition prints priced from $25 – $45 each.

Visit the website of the San Diego California Native Plant Society to learn more about them and the CNPS Holiday Program.

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Do you use…

Ceramic?
Plastic?
Wood?
An egg carton?
Baby food jars?
Old film canisters?
Old vials used originally for collecting insects?

What is on your painting table? Post your comments below.

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Holiday visitors to the Lasdon Arboretum in Somers, NY have a treat in store for them when they attend the poinsettia show and sale on December 6th. Artists in Lasdon’s botanical art program will be exhibiting their work on this day. Inspired by the surrounding gardens and trees, artists have created drawings and paintings in graphite, colored pencil and watercolor. This collection of original artwork will be on view from 1-3 PM.

The botanical art program at Lasdon is directed by Corinne Lapin-Cohen. Cohen specializes in watercolor, silverpoint, and graphite and has taught at the New York Botanical Garden and Lehman College. Teaching in partnership with Corinne is artist, Laura Gould. Program updates are posted at Classes Near You > New York.

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SunflowerEmail

© Margaret Saul, All rights reserved.

The Brookside Gardens School of Botanical Art & Illustration warmly invites you to our…

TUSCANY WORKSHOP & TOUR
A botanical workshop and tour of a lifetime!

May 29 – June 13, 2010

Instructors: Margaret Saul (School Director, botanical artist and teacher living in Tuscany) and Kandy Vermeer Phillips (Brookside Gardens faculty, botanical artist and illuminator).

Give yourself the luxury of botanical art immersion in this beautiful countryside where your commute to class is a five-minute walk through the grounds of a hotel with a bella vista and where your only concern is choosing the flowers you wish to draw and paint ready for your little jewel of an illumination inspired by the work of Renaissance artists in Siena. Instruction is cleverly designed to accommodate beginners and experienced artists. Join an artists’ gathering to meet Italian botanical artists. Bring your travel sketchbook to take on quiet woodland trails on the farm around the hotel, and on the tour of Tuscany and Umbria the following week, one made all the more enjoyable by the camaraderie that is sure to develop from sharing this wonderful experience with fellow students.

For further information about this trip of a lifetime, download the brochure (PDF, 514KB) to view the detailed itinerary, workshop & tour descriptions, and the registration form. For more information, or to request a printed brochure, contact Mark Richardson, Adult Education Programs Manager at Brookside Gardens or call 301.962.1470. Learn more about the Brookside Gardens School of Botanical Art & Illustration at www.BrooksideGardens.org.

This tour is offered jointly by Brookside Gardens and Hidden Treasures Botanical Tours, L.L.C.


Information about this workshop has also been posted to the following pages in Classes Near You: Maryland, Virginia, Washington DC, and International.

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Now at CLASSES NEAR YOU > GEORGIA:


Field & Studio Productions, LTD

www.fieldandstudio.com
Instructor: Christy Baker Knight
Art coach, botanical illustrator and member of the American Society of Botanical Artists since 1997, offers private lessons and professional training in botanical art drawing and painting in the following media: watercolor, gouache, graphite and pen-and-ink for those wishing to hone their technical skills in a supportive environment. Located in Chastain Park, Atlanta, Georgia, studio hours are flexible and references are available. For detailed information and a registration form, download the Field & Studio Winter Schedule, 2009-2010. Basic supplies are included in course fee.

  • Mapping Your Family Tree – A Saturday in December or January,
    10:00 AM – 2:00 PM. Cost: $160. Explore various options while considering the medium, visual symbolism and design of your tree. Participants will receive individual attention throughout the drawing process. Bring your own lunch.

  • Drawing and Painting Nature (all ages, all abilities) – Private lessons by appointment. Cost: See Field & Studio Winter Schedule, 2009-2010. Engage the senses as you take a botanical sojourn in the field and studio. Private lesson are tailored to the needs of the artist and may include instruction in drawing, painting, watercolor, botanical studies, portraiture, color theory, art history, or any other area of concern.
  • The Art and Science of Color (all ages) – Saturday, February 6, 2010; 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM. Open to other dates to arrange instruction for a group of 3-4 students. Cost: $75. Shake off the winter blahs and learn about value, harmony, and color theory. Bring your own lunch.
  • Drawing from Great Literature (ages 7-10) – January – March (8 weeks), Tuesdays or Wednesdays; 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM. Cost: $125. Young artists will learn important drawing tools as they learn to draw landscapes, animals and other aspects of nature while listening to a reading of The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame. This after-school program includes a snack and an outdoor activity.

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Saturday is a big day for community.

On a national level, it is National Bookstore Day and we encourage you to acknowledge your favorite bookstores and booksellers on this day that celebrates the unique culture of bookstores. Thank you to Publisher’s Weekly magazine for launching this nationwide celebration.

On a regional level, there an event we think defines community in the best way possible. In northern California, Saturday promises to be a busy day for a town bookstore, local apple growers and one botanical artist. Artist Peggy Irvine will exhibit her botanical drawings and paintings at Eureka Books, an antiquarian bookstore located in Eureka’s historic district. Irvine’s colored pencil paintings of apples will be on display as the bookstore invites local apple growers and their apples into the store. Lucky bookstore customers get to enjoy not only books, but locally grown apples and locally grown art as well!

Read all about this wonderful community event and view one of Peggy’s paintings here.

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apExhibitBadgeThere are venues and then there are venues. The Women’s Conference is quite the venue. The Women’s Conference is unique for two reasons. First, it’s huge. Tickets for the event sold out and this means that about 25,000 people were in attendance — most of them women. There were some men, but not many. I felt for one man in particular when he walked past me early on Day 1. He was a 30-something loaded down with shopping bags, the fingers of one hand stretched to the limit as he tried to keep together the handles of one of his bags. What he looked like after walking the entire Village, I’ll never know.

Exhibitors. There were many. Three hundred fourteen to be exact. The Retail category was the best represented with 102 exhibitors. This category was followed by the categories of Health (56), Community Service (56), Education (25), Other (20), Entertainment (19), Finance (13), Government (13), Technology (5), and Travel (5). Not all exhibitors worked within 100 square feet. The corporate exhibitors such as Target (a conference sponsor), had much larger spaces. The theme to Target’s exhibit was “Beauty” and there was a non-stop flow of women seated around a center counter and in front of large mirrors receiving beauty tips and makeovers (these photos were taken before the crowd entered).

The Women’s Conference is also unique for its energy. The force behind this energy is no doubt California’s First Lady, Maria Shriver. Always articulate and very real, Shriver’s positive energy nudges conference attendees into action. The conference team and inspirational guest speakers reinforce Shriver’s message to women which is: listen to your gut, be true to yourself, and be an “architect of change” first with yourself, then in a way that benefits others. Their message doesn’t stop with feel-good words and pats on the back. All involved provide suggestions and guidance as to how to get the job done. The energy and momentum generated by the conference lingers for days afterwards. This is obvious when encountering conference attendees in hotel elevators the day after and when reading conversations in forums and blogs across the Web. Undivided attention and honest conversation goes a long way and can even change a life or two or hundreds.

Observations at previous womens’ conferences and at various botanical art venues convinced me that The Women’s Conference was exactly where ArtPlantae needed to make an appearance. Both types of events are attended by women who are passionate about what they are doing and by women who are excited about what they are (finally?) doing for themselves. According to those polled so far, ArtPlantae’s readers are women, usually over age 40, and often age 50+. So The Women’s Conference seemed an ideal venue at which to introduce contemporary botanical art and how-to references to an audience with a re-energized awareness of the life and opportunities around them. I followed my gut and as a result had nice chats with teachers and friends of teachers, gardeners and friends of gardeners, horticulturists, herbalists, a student of Nina Antze, and a newly minted graduate who studied botany. There was widespread interest in ArtPlantae’s educational objective and this was very encouraging. The book Botanica Magnifica had many admirers and the pencils and handouts that were distributed had many takers. Information about a the Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California, Filoli Estate & Gardens, and the Northern California Society of Botanical Artists – other California organizations dedicated to the promotion of botanical art – was also distributed.

At the end of the day, ArtPlantae’s participation in The Women’s Conference was a worthwhile experience.



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