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Archive for the ‘botanical art’ Category

Curcubita ficifolia © Kimiko Kambe-Gang. All rights reserved.

Curcubita ficifolia © Kimiko Kambe-Gang. All rights reserved.

The Chelsea Physic Garden will celebrate the 20th anniversary of their Florilegium Society with a special exhibition.

London’s Secret Garden: Plant Portraits from Chelsea Physic Garden Florilegium Society will be on view August 4-26, 2015 and will feature works from some of today’s finest botanical artists. Open each day from 11 a.m. – 4 p.m., entrance to the exhibition is free with paid admission to the Garden.

The Florilegium Society was formed in 1995 with the explicit purpose of documenting the plant collections in the Chelsea Physic Garden. Founded in 1673, the Chelsea Physic Garden is the oldest garden in London.

Many of the works of art in the exhibition are included in the Society’s new book, Botanical Illustration from Chelsea Physic Garden, written by Andrew Brown with contributions from Christopher Bailes, Phillip Cribb and Anne-Marie Evans.

This new book can be purchased online from independent bookstores ($75 US) and from the publisher directly.


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View Symposium schedule

View Symposium schedule

Interested in learning more about the history of botany and botanical art?

A fantastic learning opportunity is coming to Southern California this summer that you don’t want to miss.

The eccentric beauty of the plant kingdom will be celebrated in a traveling exhibition of contemporary botanical illustrations and will be on view
June 13–Aug. 23, 2015 (Saturdays and Sundays only), at The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. “Weird, Wild & Wonderful: The New York Botanical Garden Second Triennial Exhibition” is curated by the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA). The juried show includes 47 works, selected from a field of nearly 240 submissions, created by ASBA artists from Australia, Canada, India, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The show will be on view in the Flora-Legium of the Brody Botanical Center and is included with general admission to The Huntington.

“Botanical artists have traditionally depicted conventionally beautiful flora,” said Robert Hori, gardens cultural curator and program director at The Huntington. “This exhibition is meant to showcase nature’s oddities—plants of charismatic quirkiness that have a bizarre beauty all their own.”

In conjunction with the exhibition, The Huntington will co-host a symposium
July 23–26, 2015, offering a broad view of all that is weird, wild, and wonderful in the plant kingdom. The symposium is presented in partnership with the ASBA and the Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California (BAGSC, the local ASBA chapter). Learn about plants, explore the history of botany, take a botanical art class and learn about photography too. You can view the complete schedule on the Symposium website.

In addition to an exciting selection of classes, there will be special keynote presentations by botanists, artists and historians. The schedule of Symposium keynote lectures is as follows:

    Thursday, July 23, 7 p.m. (Opening night dinner)
    Do You ‘See’ Plants? Using Art and Technology to Teach Science
    Jodie Holt, professor of plant physiology at the University of California, Riverside, and botanical consultant for James Cameron’s science fiction film, “Avatar.”

    Friday, July 24, 12:30 p.m.
    Painting the Wonder Plants of Borneo
    Mieko Ishikawa, botanical artist.

    Friday, July 24, 7 p.m.
    The Art of Orchids
    Phillip Cribb, deputy keeper of the Herbarium and curator of the Orchid Herbarium at the Royal Botanic Garden, Kew. This keynote is generously underwritten by Orchid Digest.

    Saturday, July 25, 12:30 p.m.
    The Beauty of Ancient Plant Representations:
    Weird or Wonderful?

    Alain Touwaide of the Institute for the Preservation of Medical Traditions.

    Saturday, July 25, 7 p.m.
    From Field to Print: Botanical Art and Photography for Conifers Around the World and the Dendrological Atlas
    Zsolt Debreczy and István Rácz of the International Dendrological Research Institute, co-authors.

An adjunct exhibition of approximately 60 works by local BAGSC members will be on view in the Brody Botanical Center Aug. 1–9. This supplemental show will extend the theme of weird and wonderful plants through educational outreach activities for children and families, demonstrations in different media, informal workshops, displays of botanical curiosities, and “Find Me in the Garden” links between the exhibitions and the botanical collections. During the week of this display, both exhibitions will be open to visitors daily (Wednesday through Monday) during public hours.

Summer school has never ever been this exciting!

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Download PDF

Download PDF

The Art of Flowers
Princeville, HI
August 3-7, 2015  
9 AM to 3 PM

A five-day botanical art workshop about the Renaissance techniques of the French Court Masters with Olivia Braida-Chiusano, founder and director of OM Art Designs and the Academy of Botanical Art in Sarasota, Florida.

This workshop will be held at the Princeville Community Center on the island of Kauai.

Designed for beginning to advanced artists, this insightful class in classical botanical art technique offers individual instruction and includes:

  • Slide presentation of “A Brief History of Botanical Art.”
  • Plant subject, paper supplies, pencils, erasers, syllabus, and handouts.
  • Daily refreshments
  • One complimentary group dinner during the study week.
  • A FREE copy of a botanical art publication by James White and Lugene Bruno, past and present curators at the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation at Carnegie Mellon University.

Participants wishing to paint their subjects must bring their own painting supplies.

Cost: $875 per person

Tuition does not include travel and hotel. Please contact The Academy for hotel information and for information about the Princeville area. Participants must to make their own hotel reservations.

Register Today


This information has been added to the “Classes Near You” sections for Hawaii and Florida.

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Determined to do their part to combat “plant blindness”, the Hortus botanicus Leiden in the Netherlands created a unique program that addresses this pesky issue on a multigenerational level.

The Garden’s multigenerational project began in Summer 2014. Centered around an exhibition of prehistoric plants, Oerplanten Atelier (Prehistoric Plants Workshop) consisted of workshops about drawing, photography, etching and monotype.

Hanneke Jelles, the Garden’s Director of Education, discussed this project at a recent international congress on education in botanic gardens. She explained that while addressing “plant blindness” was one of their motivations, it was not the Garden’s only motivation. The multigenerational format was conceived partly out of the Garden’s need to connect with the 20-somethings in Leiden who were not visiting the botanic garden.

To reach out to this group, the Garden hit the streets running. Hanneke explained the Garden marketed heavily to college students (art students specifically) and encouraged students to bring a grandparent, aunt, uncle, etc. with them to the workshop. She explained the Garden also reached out to members of Leiden’s older population and paired them with young adults.

Their planning and hard work paid off. Soon after the program was launched, the Garden’s classrooms and public spaces filled with conversations between young and old. Leiden’s experienced residents shared their recollections of plants and told stories, while younger residents learned how plants were grown and used. All the while the generations bonded, learned new things about each other, and everyone discovered new things about plants and the arts. Making their success even sweeter, the Garden saw a change in the 20-something crowd. It turns out botanical gardens aren’t such a bad place after all.

The Oerplanten Atelier project generated a lot of interest in plants and botanical illustration. So much so, that Hortus botanics Leiden is launching a course in technical drawing this fall, free for college students. This course will be taught by scientific illustrator and botanical artist, Esmeé Winkel.

Hanneke explains:

In a series of six days, a group of 2/3 students and 1/3 other interested people will learn about different aspects of drawing. For the college students the course is free of charge. The aim is not to make beautiful pictures, but to make clear pictures, that demonstrate what the students have seen in the subject they are drawing. Drawing is used as a method to concentrate on an object, to look at it very intensely, and to report what is discovered. Topics to be covered are: pollinators and plants (line), making field notes (quick and complete), leaves and cups (hair structures), fruits (volume), seeds (pen and ink, dissecting microscope), tropical plants (details). People can choose to attend all the days, or choose the days and subjects that suit them best.

We expect that the mix of university students and other people will give a good atmosphere, as it did during the ‘oerplanten atelier’ (prehistoric plants atelier) last year. We also feel that offering workshops in scientific drawing meets a need of our visitors.

Hortus botanicus Leiden also offers many public programs about plants and botanical art by Anita Walsmit Sachs. While most of these programs are in Dutch, some are in English. Anita’s upcoming classes include a five-day summer workshop (July 27-31, 2015) and a four-day winter workshop (November 3-6, 2015). Visit Anita’s website for more information (or view English version).


Learn more about Hortus botanicus Leiden



Oerplanten Atelier Slideshow

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Photos courtesy Hortus botanicus Leiden.

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Echinacea purpurea © Jane Sturgeon, All rights reserved

Echinacea purpurea © Jane Sturgeon, All rights reserved

Reed-Turner Woodland 10th Annual Botanical Art Exhibition & Plant Sale
Reed-Turner Nature Center
Long Grove, IL
May 16-17, 2015
10 AM – 3 PM

The Reed-Turner Artists’ Circle invites you to join them next weekend!

The ASBA Reed-Turner Artists’ Circle and the Long Grove-Kildeer Garden Club are pleased to announce the 10th Annual Botanical Art Exhibition and Plant Sale at the Reed-Turner Woodland and Nature Preserve.

The Reed-Turner Artists’ Circle is a network of artists who are members of the American Society of Botanical Artists. It consists of a dedicated and enthusiastic group of botanical artists, current and former students with provenance at the Chicago Botanic Garden.
 
The Group is guided by the parameters and goals of the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA). The ASBA is one of the premier organizations promoting botanical art around the world. Consistent with the mission of the ASBA, the Group works to further public interest in botanical art, conservation science, botany, and horticulture at the local level. The Group also strives to emphasize the beauty and importance plants play in our daily lives by increasing public awareness through education, promotion, and exhibition of its members’ art in collaboration with local institutions.
 
The Group has been in existence for over 11 years and meets at the Reed-Turner Woodland on the last Saturday of each month from 9:30 – 11:30 AM. Members of the public with an interest in botanical art are most welcome.


More about Reed-Turner Artists’ Circle

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Download flyer

Download flyer


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.

    Painting the Produce Section
    June 27-28, 2015
    9:30 AM – 5:30 PM

    In this two-day workshop with illustrator Kathleen McKeehen participants will learn about washes and dry-brush techniques botanical illustrators use to paint realistic fruit and vegetables. Beginning artists are welcome and encouraged to attend. Participants with experience in watercolor painting will have the opportunity to work with challenging subjects.

    Kathleen McKeehen is a freelance scientific illustrator who teaches botanical drawing and painting at her studio in Indianola, WA, at Gage Academy of the Arts in Seattle and at The Center for Urban Horticulture in Seattle, WA. Kathleen’s painting of Arbutus menziesii (Pacific Madrone) is featured in Today’s Botanical Artists by Cora B. Marcus and Libby Kyer (2007).

    Cost:
    2-day workshop without lodging $225
    2-day workshop with lodging $540

    Lodging option includes two nights lodging at the Methow Valley Inn with continental breakfast. Contact the Confluence Gallery to register.
    (509) 997-ARTS

    Download color flyer

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

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Helen Byers Botanical Art Workshops 2015 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.

    Sensuous Succulents: Botanical Drawing in Colored Pencil
    Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Boylston, Massachusetts
    March 14–15, 2015
    10 AM–4 PM

    This workshop will celebrate the forms and features of succulents—xerophytic plants that need little water because they store it in their cells. Join us to learn and practice using colored pencil to record the intriguing textures, colors, and contours that you see. Our goal will be more to learn from small-scale studies than to produce finished works, and we’ll spend extra time on color layering and blending. All levels welcome.

    TO REGISTER: email education@towerhillbg.org or call 508.869.6111


    Introduction to Botanical Illustration

    Tin Mountain Conservation Center, Albany, New Hampshire
    May 23–25, 2015

    This exciting new three-day workshop will cover the basics of botanical illustration in graphite, ink, colored pencil, and watercolor. Amid Tin Mountain’s scenic setting in the White Mountains we will explore conventional uses and effects of each medium and technique. Indoors, our plant subjects will be provided; outdoors, we’ll see what we may find! Relaxed sessions, daily demos, and plenty of individual attention. Some drawing experience helpful.

    TO REGISTER: email cblodgett@tinmountain.org or call 603.449.6991


    Flowering Trees & Shrubs: Botanical Drawing & Painting

    Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Boylston, Massachusetts
    May 30–31, 2015
    10 AM–4 PM

    Take another look at textures in this two-day workshop focused on woody stems, shiny leaves, and delicate petals. Discover what beautiful and detailed effects you can achieve, working in layers with colored pencil or watercolor. Try both techniques, or concentrate on one. Will your subject be a rhododendron or weigela, dogwood or magnolia? You and Mother Nature will decide! All levels welcome; drawing experience helpful.

    TO REGISTER: email education@towerhillbg.org or call 508.869.6111


    Botanical Drawing & Painting: Plants of the High Desert

    Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center, Abiquiu, New Mexico
    June 15–21, 2015

    The unique altitude and climate of Ghost Ranch’s 20,000+ acres host a surprising diversity of trees, shrubs, grasses, and wildflowers. In this spectacular setting, learn and practice two illustration techniques for rendering them artfully and accurately. Relaxed classroom sessions will be devoted to detailed work in colored pencil and watercolor, drawing and painting in layers. Field excursions will offer chances to locate and identify plants in several habitats. Instructional demos, individual attention, and inspiration from “the land of enchantment” will combine to make this an unforgettable week! All levels welcome.

    TO REGISTER: Register online or call 877.804.4678, ext. 4155 or 4121


Information about Helen’s classes have been posted to the Classes Near You pages for Massachusetts, New Hampshire and New Mexico.

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