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Archive for the ‘botanical art’ Category

Manzanita anthers. © Stephen Buchmann, All rights reserved

Manzanita anthers © Stephen Buchmann, All rights reserved

The Theodore Payne Arts Council invites you to
Buzz Pollinate: Slits, Pores, and Valves!

Contemporary artist
Jessica Rath is fascinated with buzz pollination, a co-adaptation between certain bees and specific angiosperms which require sonication, or vibratory resonance to release pollen from their anthers.

Over evolutionary time, the shape of these anthers has become a closed tube-like vessel with a limited opening pore or slit. These incredible shapes and the vibrations that open them are the subject of Rath’s show in the Theodore Payne Gallery.

Consulting with bee specialist Dr. Anne Leonard from University of Nevada, Reno, and buzz pollination specialist Dr. Stephen Buchmann from University of Arizona, Tucson, Rath has immersed herself in the scientific resonances around this fascinating phenomenon.

Purple Nightshade © Jessica Rath, All rights reserved

Purple Nightshade © Jessica Rath, All rights reserved

Some 5% to 6% of all the world’s angiosperms require buzz pollination, including commercial greenhouse tomatoes and some native manzanitas.

Jessica’s exhibition will include wax sculptures for cast bronze based on bee anthers, a series of watercolors, and a “buzz” sound work alluding to buzz pollination tonal values created in collaboration with experimental music composer Robert Hoehn.

Buzz Pollinate: Slits, Pores, and Valves opens on Saturday, March 29, 2014 and will be on view through June 14, 2014. You are invited to attend the opening reception from 2:00 – 4:30 pm. An artist talk will be begin at 3 PM.

Directions to Theodore Payne Foundation, Sun Valley, CA



Related

pwlogoFINALsmalEducators!

Celebrate Pollinator Week early with a visit to Buzz Pollinate: Slits, Pores, and Valves.

Pollinator Week 2014 is scheduled for June 16-22, 2014. Get resources for the classroom or your summer program on the Education page at Pollinator Partnership.

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Go to ArtCenter Manatee

Mangoes, colored pencil © Gail Swanson, All rights reserved


LOVE BOTANICALS!

ArtCenter Manatee
Bradenton, FL
April 1 – May 3, 2014

A show of contemporary botanical art by members of the Florida Society of Botanical Artists (FSBA). Established by botanical art students in 2005, the FSBA is a chapter of the American Society of Botanical Artists.

You are invited to attend the opening reception of their new exhibition.
The reception will be held on Friday, April 4, 2014 from 5-7 PM at ArtCenter Manatee in Bradenton, Florida.

The gallery at ArtCenter Manatee is open Monday, Friday, Saturday (9-5) and Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (9-6). Learn more about ArtCenter Manatee.



Related

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Learn all summer long in Massachusetts or go on week-long retreats in New Mexico. Here is what’s new in the Classes Near You sections for Massachusetts and New Mexico.


Helen Byers

www.helenbyers.com
Helen Byers is an artist and illustrator who is active in several genres and mediums. She was born in Brazil, grew up in northern California and Mexico, and now lives in Massachusetts. She qualified for the PhD in English at the University of California, Santa Barbara and taught literature and writing at the college level before moving to the Pacific Northwest to work as a freelance literary editor. After moving to Boston in 1988, she embarked on a career as an author, illustrator, and editor for educational publishers.

Since 2013, Helen has turned full-time to her lifelong love of art, teaching botanical drawing and painting in Massachusetts at Tower Hill Botanic Garden (Boylston), the Concord Art Association, and Fruitlands Museum (Harvard). She is also a regular instructor in New Mexico, at Ghost Ranch (Abiquiu), where her courses include a field-sketching workshop focused on high-desert fauna and flora, co-taught with biologist Janet Darrow.

    Workshops in Massachusetts

    Daffodils: Botanical Painting in Watercolor
    Tower Hill Botanic Garden
    Boylston, Massachusetts
    April 16, 2014
    10 AM–4 PM
    View Details/Register

    Spring Blooms: Botanical Painting in Watercolor
    Tower Hill Botanic Garden
    Boylston, Massachusetts
    May 10 & 17, 2014
    10 AM – 4 PM
    View Details/Register

    Observational Drawing in Colored Pencil
    Fruitlands Museum
    Harvard, Massachusetts
    May 31–June 2, 2014
    10 AM–3 PM
    For information and to register, email mkershaw@fruitlands.org 
or call 978-456-3924 ext. 291.

    Field Sketching & Journaling
    Fruitlands Museum
    Harvard, Massachusetts
    July 12 & 13, 2014
    10 AM–3 PM
    For information and to register, email mkershaw@fruitlands.org 
or call 978-456-3924 ext. 291.

    Daylilies: Botanical Drawing in Colored Pencil
    Tower Hill Botanic Garden
    Boylston, Massachusetts
    July 19 & 20, 2014
    10 AM–4 PM
    For information and to register call 508-869-6111.

    Harvest Home: Botanical Drawing in Colored Pencil
    Fruitlands Museum
    Harvard, Massachusetts
    August 16 & 17, 2014
    10 AM–3 PM
    For information and to register, email mkershaw@fruitlands.org 
or call 978-456-3924 ext. 291.

    Vegetables: Botanical Art in the Summer Garden
    Tower Hill Botanic Garden
    Boylston, Massachusetts
    August 23 & 24, 2014
    10 AM–4 PM
    For information and to register call 508-869-6111.


    Workshops in New Mexico
    :

    Field Sketching Ghost Ranch Fauna & Flora
    (co-taught with biologist Janet Darrow, PhD)
    Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center
    Abiquiu, New Mexico
    June 23–29, 2014
    View Details/Register

    Celebrations for Days of the Dead (Días de los Muertos)
    Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center
    Abiquiu, New Mexico
    October 27–November 2, 2014
    View Details/Register

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Download flyer, event schedule

Download flyer, event schedule

The American Society of Botanical Artists invites you to the opening of their exhibition at the Cherokee Garden Library in Atlanta, GA!

The nationally traveling exhibition Following in the Bartrams’ Footsteps: Contemporary Botanical Artists Explore the Bartrams’ Legacy opens today at the Cherokee Garden Library at the Atlanta History Center. A collaboration between the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA) and Bartram’s Garden in Philadelphia, the exhibition features world-class contemporary botanical artworks depicting plants discovered and cultivated by 18th century naturalists John and William Bartram. Early American explorers, John Bartram and his son, William, traversed the wilderness of the American colonies from the 1730s to the 1790s, recording the region’s flora, fauna, and Native American culture. The exhibition reflects John and William’s passionate observation and discovery of nature, which has influenced generations of artists and explorers.

Following in the Bartrams’ Footsteps, presented by the Cherokee Garden Library at the Atlanta History Center, is on display in McElreath Hall, March 19 – June 17, 2014. The exhibition is open Tuesday – Saturday, 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM;
Sunday, Noon – 5:00 PM; free to the public.

The original artworks were selected from a field of nearly 200 entries submitted by ASBA members from around the world. The exhibition allows a fresh look at the Bartrams’ seminal body of knowledge and art. William’s illustrations were often the first images seen of North American plants and animals. Depictions of beautiful native rarities including Franklinia alatamaha (commonly known as the Franklin tree), now believed to be extinct in the wild, Dodecatheon (commonly called shooting star), and American lotus are included in the display. Other subjects include foxglove, morning glory and cockscomb – examples of introductions the Bartrams made to American gardens through their dedication to botany.

Following in the Bartrams’ Footsteps also seeks to illuminate the role contemporary artists play in depicting these same plants for today’s audience, preserving their record for generations to come. The exhibition promises to appeal to a wide audience as it ties together art, science, history, nature, and culture. Artists enthusiastically sought out their chosen plants, with some having gone so far as to track down heirloom seeds and cultivate them in their own gardens in order to be able to paint a particularly appealing subject.

This evening’s opening event includes a lecture at 7 PM followed by a reception and an opportunity to explore the exhibition. Joel Fry, Curator of Bartram’s Garden in Philadelphia will present a survey of William Bartram’s illustrations and examine the scope and influences of his career as a seminal American natural history illustrator. Fry, who is widely published, is a leading scholar on both John and William Bartram and their botanic and collecting careers in the eighteenth century.

Tickets for the lecture are $25 and reservations are required; call 404-814-4150 or purchase online at AtlantaHistoryCenter.com/Bartram. Docent-led group tours are available for a fee and by appointment. Please email Group Tours at the Atlanta History Center.



Buy Catalog

Learn More

Learn More

This beautiful complement to the exhibition, Following in the Bartrams’ Footsteps: Contemporary Botanical Artists Explore the Bartrams’ Legacy, includes an introduction by Joel Fry, Curator, Bartram’s Garden in Philadelphia.
It also includes an essay by Patricia Jonas, Exhibitions Chair of the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA). In her essay, Jonas provides background information about the artwork in this traveling exhibition.

This 20-page booklet includes drawings and paintings by: Maryann Roper, Lizzie Sanders, Bobbi Angell, John Bartram, William Bartram, Beverly Duncan, Catherine Watters, Betsy Rogers-Knox, Wendy Cortesi, Lara Call Gastinger, Karen Kluglein, Dick Rauh, Joan Lavigueur Geyer, Judith Simon, Maria Cecilia Freeman, Derek Norman and Diane McElwain.

Available at ArtPlantae ($5).

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Queen Victoria,  © Cy DeCosse, Courtesy Cy DeCosse Photography

Queen Victoria, © Cy DeCosse, Courtesy Cy DeCosse Photography

Do you love the look and feel of botanical illustrations created in graphite?

If so, you will be mesmerized by the botanical imagery of
Cy DeCosse whose studio focuses on the alternative photographic printing processes of Platinum-Palladium, Gum Dichromate, and Photogravure. These are special, extremely time- and labor-intensive techniques that took DeCosse and master printer, Keith Taylor, years to perfect. The images they create together at Cy DeCosse Photography contain fascinating detail, delicate light and dark tones and botanical subjects that float on paper.

DeCosse’s portfolio includes 11 themed collections. The following collections may be of particular interest to botanical artists: Midnight Garden, The Color of Food, The Beauty of Food in Platinum, Flowers in Platinum and Weeds.

In May, the VERVE Gallery of Photography in Santa Fe, New Mexico will present a solo exhibition of The Midnight Garden, DeCosse’s collection of night-blooming flowers printed in platinum. This exhibition will be on view May 2 – June 21, 2014.

Learn more about the VERVE Gallery of Photography at www.VERVEGallery.com



About Cy DeCosse

Cy DeCosse is a former art director and Fulbright Scholar. His fine art photography has been in solo exhibitions with John Stevenson Gallery in NYC, Weinstein Gallery in Minneapolis, Iris Galleries in Boston and Aspen. His work is in many private collections around the world.

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Botanist and scientific illustrator Bobbi Angell is one of many artists participating in Flora: A Celebration of Flowers in Contemporary Art, an exhibition at the Brattleboro Museum & Art Center (March 15 – June 22, 2014). This new exhibition occupies four of the museum’s six galleries and explores artists’ relationship with flowers. Angell has more than 20 pieces in the exhibition. They include

Tritonia copper etching 9"x6" © Bobbi Angell, All rights reserved

Tritonia copper etching 9″x6″ © Bobbi Angell, All rights reserved

copper etchings, scientific illustrations and illustration work printed in related publications.

Educational events associated with Flora will be offered through Spring. They include Artist Talks, an orchid care workshop, a wildflower walk, a gallery tour, a special lecture about bumblebees, a visit to one of the finest private gardens in North America, and a hands-on workshop with Bobbi Angell who will guide participants in the drawing of spring flowers and orchids.

Details about each event, as well as selected images from the exhibition at
Flora: A Celebration of Flowers in Contemporary Art.

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Kathleen McKeehen, Scientific Illustrator

www.florawithfauna.com
Kathleen is a teacher and freelance illustrator. Her work has appeared in Organic Gardening Magazine and The Herb Companion. View Kathleen’s artwork in the ASBA Members’ Gallery or at the Guild of Natural Science Illustrators’
Science-Art.com. Kathleen welcomes both beginners and advanced students to her classes.

    Botanical Drawing, Gage Academy of Art
    Fridays, April 11 – May 9, 2014; 9:30 am – 12:00 pm
    The basics of drawing will be covered, beginning with using line expressively to portray botanical subjects, then progressing to use of various methods of shading to show form and three-dimensionality. While the class focuses on plant subjects, the methods and techniques taught work well for rendering any subject realistically. All levels welcome; intermediate students can take on more complicated subjects with instructor supervision. 206 323-GAGE
    View Details/Register


    Blooming Botanicals!
    , Gage Academy of Art
    Fridays, April 11 – May 9, 2014; 1:30 – 4:30 pm
    Learn the classical method for botanical painting, dry-brush watercolor. Measurement, washes, dry-brush techniques, composition–methods and materials will be covered as students learn to portray botanical subjects, with an emphasis on the flowers of spring. All levels welcome; returning students can choose to work on projects of their choice, including subjects non-botanical. 206 323-GAGE
    View Details/Register


    Botanical Drawing
    , Center for Urban Horticulture
    Tuesdays, April 1 – May 13, 2013; 7:00 – 9:30 pm.
    Students will learn the basics of drawing botanical subjects, moving from line work on to shading to portray realistic 3-dimensional forms. All levels are welcome, and repeating students can take on more advanced subjects with plentiful instructor supervision or can learn pen & ink and pencil on scratchboard techniques. 206-685-8033
    View Details/Register (Note: This link works in Safari, but not Firefox)


    Bugs, Bones, Birds and Botanicals
    , Winslow Art Center, Bainbridge Island
    Wednesdays, April 1 – May 21, 2014; 10 am – 1 pm
    While dry-brush watercolor is the most often used method for botanicals, it’s also the perfect medium for portraying other natural science subjects. Learn to paint insects, skulls & bones, birds, or botanicals using the classic dry-brush technique to portray them realistically and three-dimensionally. All levels welcome. 206-618-3112
    View Details/Register


    Botanical Watercolor Workshop – Spring Petals
    , Kruckeberg Botanic Garden, Shoreline, WA
    Two 3-hour sessions: May 1 at Shoreline City Hall (6:00 – 8:30 pm) and May 3 at Kruckeberg Gardens in Shoreline (11:00 am – 1:00 pm).
    Learn the basics of botanical watercolor to paint flower petals in a two-session workshop at the Shoreline City Hall and the beautiful Kruckeberg Botanic Garden in Shoreline. View Details/Register


    Botanical Watercolor Workshop – Painting the Produce Section
    , Gage Academy
    Saturday & Sunday, August 9-10, 2014; 9:30 am – 4:30 pm
    Explore classic botanical watercolor techniques of small graded washes and dry brush while painting the lush products of summer, such as mangoes, tomatoes, or peppers. A good place to start for beginners, and a challenge as well for those with more experience! All levels.
    206 323-GAGE
    View Details/Register

This information has been added to Classes Near You > Washington.

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