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Archive for the ‘botanical art’ Category

Today, featured artist Heeyoung Kim talks about her work in progress.


Heeyoung, since it is not always possible to document a plant’s life cycle in one season, I assume you must have paintings on hold. How many drawings or paintings do you have in-progress at any given time?


Heeyoung
:

Right now, 58 drawings and paintings are in progress.

Early spring flowers are very difficult to finish up as a serious painting. They bloom very early when the weather is still too severe for me to sit hours in the woods. Quite often we have snow which damages the fragile spring flowers, or shorten their blooming time. And too many flowers bloom all together, which makes me feel just hurried, but not doing a lot. So I have a lot of drawings started, but never have enough time to color them.

Mid-summer plants are also challenges. I have to stop going to the woods when it is too hot and too buggy and ticks are all around. When you find 7 ticks from your hair, you say, “Oh My God! Let’s stop!”

I am thrilled, though, thinking of the day when I finish all of them.


Do you have field projects in progress? Tell us what you’re working on!

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Here is the latest at Classes Near You > England :


Highgate Literary & Scientific Institute

www.hlsi.net
Cultural arts center and library in London founded in 1839. In addition to their courses in botanical drawing and painting, the Highgate Literary & Scientific Institute offers courses in art, art history, ancient and modern languages, music appreciation and the history of London.

    Botanical Drawing & Painting with Sandra Wall Armitage
    Mondays, September 24 – December 3, 2012; 2:30 – 4:30 PM. Study shape, color, texture and the structure of plants in this introductory course taught by Sandra Wall Armitage. Cost: £80, members, £90 non-members.
    View Details/Register

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Our conversation with Heeyoung Kim continues…


Question #4: I read the painting of Silene regia, the Royal Catchfly
(Image 6), took two years to create. What challenges did you encounter with this project?


Heeyoung
: The biggest challenge was the weather and location. This beautiful red plant was in full bloom in August. The temperature at that time went up to 100 degrees in the prairie. The hot and humid prairie was heaven for the bugs and insects. They literally tried to eat me up alive. When we have hot and humid weather in Chicago land, usually sudden showers follow. You can imagine what happened to me with my big sketch pad. Another challenge was the plant itself. It had a very complicated structure with multiple flower stalks branched out at several nodes. And it’s hairy and sticky. That is how it got its common name; the sticky hair catches flies. When I tried to start drawing, the composition didn’t come to me. After several days’ trial, I still could not get it started. So I changed my strategy. Forget the composition! Study parts first, and then work with the whole image! For many days afterwards, I did detailed drawings of petals, flowers, and leaves to make myself familiar with the plant structure and shape. Finally when I felt I got to know the plant, I could compose the image on paper with confidence. It took 2 weeks to get the composition I liked. At the end of the year, I proudly showed my finished painting to my mentor. He gave me wonderful compliments, but very cautiously advised me to see some other photos, as he believed the red on the painting was not intense enough. I could not believe that, because I worked first-hand with the plant right in the habitat for so long and so hard. Without having my signature on that painting, I put it in my flat file and waited one year to see the color again with my bare eyes. The following spring, I made regular visits to check the whole life cycle of the plant. What I found out in the second year was very simple. My observation in the first year started too late. I missed the very early bud which had more orange and the brightest red in freshly bloomed flowers. That was the biggest lesson I keep in mind ever since. I feel like I learned everything about botanical drawing and watercolor, and the way I should approach my subjects, in this one project.

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NOTE: Heeyoung’s painting of the Royal Catchfly is the signature image for the upcoming meeting of the American Society of Botanical Artists. This year, botanical artists from all over the world will travel to Illinois to attend this annual meeting.



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The City College of Glascow announces botanical illustration classes for Fall and early Spring 2013. Here’s the latest at Classes Near You > Scotland:

Botanical Drawing & Painting

  • Botanical Drawing – Thursdays, 10 weeks, beginning September 6, 2012; 6-9 PM. Beginning artists will learn how to draw and paint flowers, fruit and vegetables. Cost: £96. For more information, contact Clare Crines. View course schedule to register.
  • Botanical Drawing – Thursdays, 10 weeks, beginning November 29, 2012; 6-9 PM. Beginning artists will learn how to draw and paint flowers, fruit and vegetables. Cost: £96. For more information, contact Clare Crines. View course schedule to register.
  • Botanical Drawing – Thursdays, 10 weeks, beginning March 7, 2013; 6-9 PM. Beginning artists will learn how to draw and paint flowers, fruit and vegetables. Cost: £96. For more information, contact Clare Crines. View course schedule to register.

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Featured guest, Heeyoung Kim, shares how she collects field data:


After you locate a plant in the field, how do you approach recording the plant’s information? Do you begin with a written description of its identifying characteristics or do you prefer to think visually and create a sketch first?


Heeyoung
:

When I am introduced to a new plant either with help from my “plant scout” or through a book, I can usually see it from its blooming season. I do start sketching parts of the plant, but I prefer working with the whole composition after I see its full life cycle in the next year.

Both written and graphic records are essential for a proper description, I believe. I usually start measuring botanically distinctive features of the plant with the metric system first. I then draw them from different angles and in various stages with color notes or sample coloring with colored pencil or watercolor. I know we are used to inch and feet in America, but in most other countries they use the metric system and they require you to write scales in centimeters and millimeters when you do scientific illustration and write a plant legend. For color notes, sometimes I just write down the paint tube names I will probably use to paint the plant. I find this works very well for me, as I can directly envision the painting process while I am looking at the plant.

I record all of my notes on one large paper, which I always have with me whenever I go out for sketch.


Join this conversation already in progress

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Artwork © Susan Brown Hardy. Image courtesy of Greg Bolosky.

Artist Susan Hardy Brown brings a fresh perspective to the important work performed in herbaria throughout the world. Using materials gathered from her work as a curatorial assistant at the Herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum, Brown captures plants and their diversity in paintings created using beeswax and resin — a technique called encaustic painting.

An exhibition of Brown’s work, Ex Herbario:
Recent Works by Susan Hardy Brown
, will be on view in the Hunnewell Building Lecture Hall at the Arnold Arboretum from July 14 – September 16, 2012.

Brown will discuss her work during Artist Talk: Susan Hardy Brown, a free lecture to be held on Thursday, September 13, 2012 from 7:00 – 8:30 PM. To attend this event, please register here.

The public will have another opportunity to meet Susan Hardy Brown during a special reception scheduled for Saturday, September 15 from 1-3 PM.

Harvard University’s Arnold Arboretum is a 265-acre living collection of trees, shrubs and woody vines. It is the oldest public arboretum in North America and is free and open to the public everyday. The Hunnewell Building Lecture Hall is in continuous use for classes and other events. Please check the current visiting hours of the Hunnewell Building and call (617) 384-5209 to confirm the exhibition will be available for viewing.



Related

Learn more about encaustic art. Visit International Encaustic Artists online.

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Heeyoung Kim is a botanical artist whose illustrations and paintings of American prairie plants have graced posters, postcards and exhibition catalogs. Earlier this year, Heeyoung’s paintings of prairie plants were awarded a gold medal by the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) in England. Heeyoung’s collection of paintings at the RHS show focused on the common, rare and endangered plants of the American prairie. Heeyoung explains why she is devoted to documenting these rapidly disappearing plants:

Since the late 1800s, the fertile tallgrass prairie has been converted into an intensive crop producing area. This region of the US is called America’s ‘breadbasket’ or ‘corn belt’. What was once the largest ecosystem of the American continent with a biodiversity rivaling the richest rainforests, has yielded to commercial agriculture leaving its flora and fauna in peril.

Heeyoung brings attention to the fragile state of America’s prairies by exhibiting her work in national and international exhibitions such as Losing Paradise? Endangered Plants Here and Around the World, a traveling exhibition by the American Society of Botanical Artists. Her award-winning RHS paintings were recently featured in a solo exhibition at Northbrook Library in Northbrook, IL.

Heeyoung began her botanical art career in January 2007. Before this time, painting was more of a recreational activity. When she first came to the U.S., she started painting with oil and colored pencil just to make friends and to learn English at the senior center where she volunteered. Then one day, after a couple of years of painting this way, she noticed that every single painting was a detailed floral painting. She began to think about painting flowers seriously, but didn’t know how to begin until she saw a magazine published by the Chicago Botanic Garden. “It mentioned something like ‘botanical art’, which I had never heard of in my life,” says Heeyoung.

So Heeyoung enrolled in Botanical Drawing 1 at the Chicago Botanic Garden and became a botanical artist the moment her instructor shared samples of botanical art with the class. Heeyoung says, “I felt like the drawings grabbed me right in the heart.”

After completing this class, she signed up for Botanical Drawing 2, Ink Drawing 1, Ink Drawing 2 and other classes offered through the botanical art certificate program at the Chicago Botanic Garden. Instead of pursuing a certificate in botanical art, Heeyoung decided to work on independent projects and to work with her instructor independently. The mentor who inspired her so much was Derek Norman, Vice President of the American Society of Botanical Artists. As Heeyoung explains, “I was with the right person from the beginning.”

During her first year of botanical painting, Heeyoung spent all of her available time at the Reed-Turner Nature Center in Long Grove, Illinois. Fascinated by the many beautiful woodland plants that grew “like magic in every moment, showing off their flowers and preparing for the next generation”, Heeyoung began to draw the different stages of plant development she observed. She did this without having any purpose in mind. “I just loved the changes,” she says.

Sometime later, Heeyoung became friends with Stephen Packard, the leader of a Chicago land volunteer team working to restore the tallgrass prairie. Heeyoung was surprised to learn that the tallgrass prairie is almost extinct and that there are experts and volunteers working tirelessly to preserve what remains of America’s prairies. These same experts and volunteers are also converting abandoned farmland back into prairie. Heeyoung explains that, while the conservation efforts are strong and steady, the public has no idea what is happening with the remnants of prairie located within their own neighborhoods. Upon learning this, Heeyoung knew that she could do something to change this.

I believe art is a great way to make connections with people and to inspire them to act. At this point my prairie project started. I changed my website domain to www.PrairiePlantArt.com, and started to focus on painting prairie plants from my long wishlist. When I had my first solo exhibition at Ryerson Woods Conservation Area last spring, I invited Stephen Packard to the opening reception and shared stories about prairie culture and restoration. That was an eye-opening moment to most of the 320 attendees.

I showed eight paintings from my prairie project at RHS London last March and twenty-six drawings and paintings at a local public library in May. When the art director of the library invited me to have a solo show there, I hesitated a little because I was concerned about possible damage to the artwork from heavy traffic, especially from the many children visitors. But then I thought that libraries can be the best place to get (the public’s) attention. So I accepted the offer gratefully. The result was fantastic. The best feedback was, ‘The whole town was in awe!’

Please join me in welcoming Heeyoung Kim as the Featured Artist for July!


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