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When Elaine Searle was enrolled in Anne-Marie Evans’ class by a friend, she did not know a thing about botanical art. That was in 2002.

Today in 2011, Elaine has work in the permanent collection at The Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation and is a contributing artist to The Highgrove Florilegium, a collection of paintings documenting the plants grown in the Garden at Highgrove, the estate of HRH, The Prince of Wales.


How It All Began

Elaine received conventional art school training. After an initial year’s foundation program which included life drawing, ceramics, graphic design, etching and silkscreen printing, she chose graphics as a specialization before commencing a three-year Bachelor of Arts Degree. This decision shaped her first business career.

Graduating with an interest in Package Design, Elaine’s early career in the retail industry saw her build and manage teams of designers working on some of the most successful store concepts of the 1980-90’s. For the next 10 years, she ran a design partnership offering retail and print design to clients in the UK and Spain. This meant lots of business travel and a 24/7 schedule became the norm.

Elaine lived in an apartment in London during this time, with no garden and certainly no time to garden. Plants were not even a part of her life. Over time, Elaine became stressed with her business and a good friend told her she needed a hobby because all she did was work. The friend suggested that Elaine take a class in botanical art, something which she herself had recently done. Elaine’s reaction was, “What’s botanical art?”

Three months later, this concerned friend reserved a spot in Anne Marie Evans’ class for both of them. She told Elaine all she needed to do was show up.

Elaine showed up that first day. She returned on the second day too. However at the end of the second day, Elaine was strongly tempted not to continue.

Having used computers all of her professional life as a graphic designer, she had lost her drawing skills. She glanced rather than really looked and, in addition, didn’t even know the stamen in a flower were called stamen – referring to them as “the little bits in the middle.” She felt out of her depth. Coaxed by her very supportive husband, however, Elaine decided to return for Day Three.

That day proved to be a turning point. Anne-Marie’s teaching worked its magic and Elaine began to relax. During Days 3-5, Elaine’s experience with botanical art transformed from one of apprehension to intrigue to enthusiasm. She finished the five-day course in a much better place than when she started. After completing the course, Elaine returned to her full-time graphics business.

The experience of Anne-Marie’s class remained at the forefront of Elaine’s mind. She sought out botanical art books, traveled to exhibitions, and enrolled in more short classes. Her new obsession took on a life of its own. She contemplated joining the diploma program at the English Gardening School at Chelsea, where Anne-Marie was course director, and talked it over with her husband. Was it feasible that she could continue to run her design business, attend classes and keep up with the heavy schedule of homework? Well, her heart won over her head and she decided to enroll, financing the program with a bank loan. She structured her life so she could keep up with both her graphics business and the diploma course. Wherever possible, she made pragmatic choices – such as selecting specimens for her final project that did not move or change too much (succulents). After a hectic but very enjoyable two years, she graduated with a Distinction. Botanical art had become her passion, but financial realities meant that Elaine needed to resume her graphics business full-time.

Botanical art continued to lure Elaine. Whenever she met Anne Marie, her teacher would encourage Elaine to take her art further. Anne-Marie suggested she set her sights on the juried exhibitions hosted by the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) in London.

Artists submitting work to the RHS exhibition are required to submit eight drawings or paintings related by a theme. Not having time to create a collection of new work, Elaine used the six succulent paintings which had formed her final project for the diploma course, painted two more, exhibited her work in January 2008, and was awarded a Silver gilt medal.

Then Anne-Marie suggested she submit work to The Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation. Lacking the time to begin a project from scratch, Elaine sent two of those same succulents to The Hunt for their 12th Annual Exhibition, and now one of them is in the permanent collection. The exhibition gave Elaine her chance to attend her first American Society of Botanical Artists conference (which, incidentally, was also her first visit to the USA).

Elaine was surprised and honored by an invitation to paint for The Highgrove Florilegium. Elaine’s painting of Crocosmia ‘Emily McKenzie’ was accepted for inclusion in Volume I of the historic work. You can view this painting here on Elaine’s website.

While working on the Highgrove project, Elaine began to entertain the idea of teaching botanical art. She began by holding small classes locally. Wanting to see how things would go, she kept this new project low-key until she was more sure that it worked for her and her students. When she was given the opportunity to become a visiting instructor for the very diploma program she had attended in Chelsea, she gained additional and invaluable experience.

Well, word got out that Elaine was teaching, and she was invited to demonstrate at the 2008 ASBA conference and to teach at the 2009 conference. Elaine will teach again at the 2011 conference in Boston this Fall.

Elaine teaches in the UK, USA and Europe and plans and leads experiences in botanical art at vacation destinations such as Portugal and Italy. She recently launched a thoughtful and well-structured distance learning program for both beginning and experienced botanical artists.



A Conversation with Elaine Searle

ARTPLANTAE: Your paintings are not simple plant portraits. They have a presence on the paper. How do you decide on the statement your plant will make on the paper? What type of factors come into play — A plant’s physical features? Your first impression? Your past experiences with that type of plant? All of the above?

ELAINE SEARLE: Each plant has a personality. Sometimes It isn’t what you would first think of. For example, I recently painted a blue hydrangea. With its enormous “mop head” blooms and strong leaves I saw it as a “thug” in the garden. It demands your attention not because it is beautiful or brightly colored, but because of its architectural strength. I am drawn to plants that demand attention. I rarely paint herbs or wildflowers. Perhaps it’s time I did! I should find a way to give voice to their understated beauty.


AP
: What is your teaching philosophy?

ES: I believe people learn best in a safe and supportive environment. I try to take the fear out of the room. I want people to relax and to open their minds to what personally they might achieve. I like to share some of the mistakes I’ve made along the way. My teaching demonstrates that botanical art is a series of steps, which when broken down, are not difficult to learn. I don’t want to get too intense. The basic skills of watercolor painting are not complex, but to master them requires focus, determination and lots of practice. I always try to establish realistic expectations of what can be achieved within a short class. I think we often learn by making mistakes, and I think my teaching style is nurturing. I try to build confidence and discourage competitiveness.


AP
: How do you think students new to botanical art learn drawing best?

ES: I think they learn drawing with the fundamentals. By first learning to look, then to analyze, and then achieve sufficient control of the medium to be able to explain what they see. If they learn an approach based on breaking complex botanical forms down into simpler shapes and then build their drawings adding layers of refinement and detail, it reduces fear.


AP
: How do you think students new to botanical art learn painting best?

ES: By initially being introduced to a series of exercises that are not about painting botanical forms. They should be taught the correct brush hold and how to paint simple flat and graded washes. You can’t really tell someone the ratio of pigment-to-water they need. They need to practice making the paint do what they want it to do before they think about making flower or leaf shapes. Even now I still make squares of practice washes to loosen up or to try new pigments.


AP
: How do you think students with experience in botanical art learn best?

ES: They need to critique and to be critiqued without taking it personally. Learning how to critique is a valuable tool. The more experienced student needs to seek feedback from other more experienced artists whose work they admire and whose professional opinion they trust. Once they gain insight to where their strengths and weaknesses may lie, they can seek the specific tuition they need. Generally, the botanical community is a supportive one, so there are people willing to help them and share their knowledge either in the context of a masterclass or informally through discussion at an exhibition or conference. The more they are prepared to study the work of both historical and contemporary botanical masters, the more they will grow as artists.


AP
: You have developed a thoughtful and interactive distance learning program. Tell us about it.

ES: The idea for this program came out of a number of direct requests. To develop and launch such a program was not an easy decision. My own very positive experience of excellent classroom tuition made me aware that it’s very difficult for a distance learning program to match a classroom’s environment and benefits. Yet, there were clearly those who sought botanical art tuition, but were prevented from pursuing traditional routes to learning, and I wanted to develop a program that would work for those people. And, perhaps to act as an additional resource for those already taking periodic classes seeking a more structured and self-paced approach.

Researching other botanical art distance learning programs, I saw that there were basically two types. First, those which are small and very focused on a particular artist’s approach/techniques; or, second, those which were large, rather impersonal, and structured around “How to” manuals. I didn’t find that either embraced the capacity of the emerging technology of interactive learning via the Web in order to offer a more personal and nurturing environment.

Many questions arose. How could I translate the best of the classroom experience into home learning? How could I offer a structure, yet still tailor the program to some extent, to allow for differing starting levels of experience? How would I ensure that students felt motivated and supported throughout so that “distance” learning felt “up close and personal”?

The program launched in January 2011 is comprised of six modules introducing the student to the basics of observation, drawing and watercolor painting of botanical subjects. The later modules cover perceived problem colors, composition, creating textures, detail and depth.

A small group of students in the UK, USA and Japan have so far enrolled. Some are absolute beginners, others already take classes but like the idea of supplementing these with online learning. This is an evolving project and I have plans to add improved levels of interactivity, utilize video conferencing, etc. Watch my website – www.paintbotanical.com – for more news.



Office Hours with Elaine Searle

Now is your chance to ask Elaine questions about botanical art, her classes, and her new distance learning program. Elaine will hold office hours through the month of May. You are invited to submit questions to Elaine through the Comment form. Elaine will watch for your questions and will respond to all questions below.

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A brain isn’t just left-sided or right-sided. It is a single working unit that makes it possible to understand the interdisciplinary nature of knowledge.

This view is expressed by Edmond Alkaslassy and Terry O’Day in Linking Art and Science with a Drawing Class, published in Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, the refereed quarterly publication of the Association of College and University Educators.

Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) wanted to help students recognize the shared skills required in art and science, so they designed a drawing course for second-semester freshmen enrolled in an introductory biology class. This drawing course was taught in conjunction with the biology lecture/lab class. The researchers wanted to use the drawing course as a tool to reinforce the message that good observational skills are beneficial in both an artistic and scientific setting (Alkaslassy and O’Day, 2002).

Unlike other experiments in which drawing activities are incorporated into a lab class, Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) were careful to keep the drawing class free of heavy biological content. They wanted the drawing class to be a course where students could improve their drawing ability. That’s it.

To preserve this format, they made sure drawing exercises did not resemble biology homework for fear the drawing course would become a “help session” (Alkaslassy and O’Day, 2002) for the biology class. Students were not even required to label drawings of subjects they had not yet learned about in the lecture class. Adding labels to drawings was viewed as being “tantamount to asking (students) to study and learn biology” (Alkaslassy and O’Day, 2002). The authors wanted to see if improved drawing ability had an effect on student observational skills and, therefore, an effect on academic performance in the lecture class.


The Results


Did learning how to observe in a drawing course improve academic performance in the biology class?

No. During the semester, all students enrolled in Biology 202 were required to complete five exams and twelve labs. At the end of the term, the mean scores of students enrolled in both the drawing class and the lecture/lab class were lower than the mean scores of the other students.

Why?

Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) propose some reasons why this may have been the case:

  • The students who enrolled in the drawing course were academically weaker than students who did not enroll in the drawing course. College GPAs and SAT scores between the two groups were compared. The historical indicator of student success in the Biology 202 course (verbal SAT scores) were lower for students enrolled in the art course and the lecture/lab course.
  • The self-selected students enrolled in the drawing course because they were already concerned about their performance in Biology 202 and wanted the extra “tutorial”, which of course they did not receive because the drawing course was not designed to be a “help session”.
  • The drawing course created a false sense of understanding caused by the repeated observation of biological subjects.


Did the drawing course improve student drawing ability?

Yes. Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) state this outcome can be observed in the pre-instructional and post-instructional drawings of trees completed by students. One example of a pre- and post- drawing is included in Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002). Students’ own comments about their improved drawing skills reinforce this finding.


Did students recognize observation as a shared skill worth developing in art and science?

Yes. Student comments about the relationship between drawing and biology suggest they were beginning to recognize the interdisciplinary nature of learning. Here is an example of one student’s comment in Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002):

I have realized, during my labs, how much more attention I pay to what I am trying to draw. Before I took this drawing class, I would’ve drawn a worm like a long skinny line and not given it its true justice of what it is really composed of.

The paper by Alkaslassy and O’Day is available online for free. See the Literature Cited section below.


Literature Cited

Alkaslassy, Edmond and Terry O’Day. 2002. Linking art and science with a drawing class. Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching 28(2): 7-14. Web.
25 April 2011. <http://acube.org/bioscene/>

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The Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden will offer a unique approach to learning botanical art techniques in 2011.

See what’s planned at Classes Near You >California:


Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Gardens

www.arboretum.org
Courses in introductory botanical drawing, beginning and intermediate watercolor, colored pencil, sketching and Chinese brush painting are taught throughout the year. Go to the Events & Classes for more information. The Arboretum is located in Arcadia, CA. To register, contact Jill Berry or call (626) 821-4624.

Botanical Illustration with Olga Eysymontt
Unlike previous years, the Spring botanical illustration classes will meet bi-monthly for 4 hours each session (9:30 AM – 2:30 PM). Tuesdays will be dedicated to graphite pencil and Wednesdays to watercolor. The goal of these sessions is to practice and refine your preferred technique. Students should have some experience with their chosen medium. A finished piece is not expected. Cost: $160 per month (members); $190 per month (non-members).

Since 1997, Olga Eysymontt has taught botanical illustration classes for the Arboretum. She is a former instructor at Otis College of Art, and a Fine Arts graduate of Rochester Institute of Technology. Olga is passionate about teaching and the thrill of bringing out each student’s vision. Aside from botanical illustration, her current interests include landscape and macro photography.

    Quick Sketching Skills: Getting the right Angle Before I Commit
    Tuesdays (Jan. 11 & 25, 2011), Wednesdays (Jan. 12 & 26, 2011)

    Form: How dark or light should I make my specimen?
    Tuesdays (Feb. 8 & 22, 2011); Wednesdays (Feb. 9 & 23, 2011)

    Overlap and Transition: Making Things Look Clear & Precise in a 2-D World
    Tuesdays (March 8 & 22, 2011); March 9 & 23, 2011)

    Details: Oh that fuzz!
    Tuesdays (April 5 & 19, 2011); Wednesdays (April 6 & 20, 2011)

    Composition: What is the focus and how do I get inspired to make a statement piece?
    Tuesdays, (May 3 & 17, 2011); May 4 & 18, 2011)

    Experimentation: Being Unpredictable and Refreshing
    Tuesdays (May 31 & June 14, 2011); Wednesdays (June 1 & 15, 2011)

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Now at Classes Near You > Michigan and Classes Near You > Ohio:


Deborah Kopka, DK Designs

www.dkdesigns.org
Botanical illustrator, Deborah Kopka is the principal artist at DK Designs. Deborah licenses her artwork, creates illustrations for publishers, and teaches botanical art classes through her design studio. Unless otherwise specified, all workshops are taught at Edgerton Art in Perrysbury, OH.

  • Botanical Drawing I: Graphite – Saturdays, January 22, 29 and February 5, 12, 19, 26, 2011; 9:30 AM – 12:30 PM. Learn how to create botanical drawings in graphite. Learn how to apply illustration techniques used by scientific illustrators and how to create graceful compositions. Location: University of Michigan Matthaei Botanical Gardens. Register Here
  • Botanical Drawing II: Colored Pencil – Saturdays, March 12, 19, 26 and April 2, 9, 16, 2011; 9:30 AM – 12:30 PM. Create beautiful botanical drawings with colored pencils. Students will work from live plant specimens and practice techniques used by colored pencil artists. Location: University of Michigan Matthaei Botanical Gardens. Register Here
  • Botanical Drawing II: Colored Pencil – Mondays, January 10, 17, 24, 31; February 7, 14, 21, 28, and March 7, 14, 2011; 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM. This 10-week class concludes with a three-week project. Students select their own project. Location: Edgerton Art, 26963 Eckel Road, Ste 301-A, Perrysburgh, Ohio. Phone: (419) 290-OILS (6459). Email: edgerton.art@att.net
  • Private Lessons – Receive personalized attention in a customized learning environment. Request Information
  • Schedule a Workshop for Your Organization! Request Information

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Val Webb creates lovely sketchbook journals you don’t want to miss. See her upcoming courses at Classes Near You > Alabama.


The Illustrated Garden, A Studio Blog

http://valwebb.wordpress.com
See Val Webb’s online tutorial, Botanical Drawing with Pencil and Watercolor. Connect with The Illustrated Garden on Facebook!

  • Botanical Drawing: A Winter Garden –  Thursdays, January 13, 20, 27 and February 3, 10, 17, 2011 (6 weeks); 2 – 5 PM. Draw and paint coastal cool-season plants working from live specimens of camellias, day lilies, winter jasmine and the many heirloom vegetable plants that thrive in Alabama’s cold months.  Use traditional scientific drawing techniques to create realistic botanicals in pencil, ink, colored pencil and gouache. No experience necessary, all art supplies provided. Cost: $140. Payment may be made by check or credit card, and must be received to hold a place in class. For information, email Val Webb.
  • Sketching Birds of the Gulf Coast – Saturday, January 22, 2011;
    9 AM – 4 PM. 5 Rivers Delta Resource Center. Spanish Fort, AL. Learn to make fast, accurate sketches of coastal bird species in graphite and colored pencil. Practice traditional scientific illustration techniques in a relaxed, encouraging setting. No previous art experience necessary… you’ll be amazed by what you can create! All supplies and instructional materials are provided by the instructor and are included in the cost. Coffee, assorted juices and fresh muffins will be provided during the morning. Pack your lunch, and we’ll take our midday break on the deck overlooking the beautiful Mobile delta. Cost: $45. Class size is limited and this workshop usually fills up quickly. Payment must be received to reserve your spot.  Payment may be made by check or credit card, and must be received to hold a place in class. For information, email Val Webb.

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The moment you open Fundamental Graphite Techniques by Katie Lee, you know you are holding something different in your hands. Something you’ve never seen before. Something you know you need.

Whether you view a graphite pencil as a mere stepping stone to a watercolor painting or you view a graphite pencil as the specialized tool of your preferred medium, by the time you finish this book, you will have fresh new insight into what can be accomplished with a simple pencil.

Katie leads artists carefully through thirty-three exercises. Each exercise is presented as a worksheet. Katie provides detailed instruction, helpful visual aids, and encouragement every step of the way. Through very patient instruction, Katie instructs artists how to think about their subject, how to see their subject, and emphasizes the importance of using both written words and illustrations during the preliminary stages of a drawing. Without much effort, Katie demonstrates how simple geometric shapes are really simplified natural forms. She makes it easy for artists to see how cones can be flower buds and apical meristems; how cylinders can be petioles, pedicels, branches, and stems; how spheres can be fruit; how cubes can be square stems; and how multiple cylinders, when viewed above and below eye level, can serve as the foundation for florets in an inflorescence.

What will you be able to do upon completing the exercises in this book?

  • Worksheet 1 – Draw lines
  • Worksheet 2 – Draw outlines & contour lines
  • Worksheet 3 – Create expressive lines
  • Worksheet 4 – Create continuous tone
  • Worksheet 5 – Create value scales in continuous tone
  • Worksheet 6 – Create hatched tone
  • Worksheet 7 – Create value scales in hatched tone
  • Worksheet 8 – Create continuous tone on a cylinder
  • Worksheet 9 – Create continuous tone on multiple cylinders
  • Worksheet 10 – Create continuous tone on cylinders both above and below eye level
  • Worksheet 11 – Create continuous tone on a sphere
  • Worksheet 12 – Create continuous tone on multiple spheres
  • Worksheet 13 – Create continuous tone on a cone
  • Worksheet 14 – Create continuous tone on multiple cones
  • Worksheet 15 – Create three-dimensional cubes
  • Worksheet 16 – Render convex and concave surfaces on a single subject
  • Worksheet 17 – Create continuous tone on a subject composed of connected surface areas
  • Worksheet 18 – Use line to create surface contours
  • Worksheet 19 – Create convex and concave contour lines
  • Worksheet 20 – Draw a sphere using contour lines
  • Worksheet 21 – Draw folds
  • Worksheet 22 – Draw the twisting/folding features of plants
  • Worksheet 23 – Draw the twisting and graceful features of grass
  • Worksheet 24 – Draw a pumpkin
  • Worksheet 25 – Draw a raspberry
  • Worksheet 26 – Draw grapes
  • Worksheet 27 – Draw a pinto bean and its pigment pattern
  • Worksheet 28 – Sketch using different sketching techniques
  • Worksheet 29 – Measure a specimen with your eye
  • Worksheet 30 – Create a line drawing of a folded leaf
  • Worksheet 31 – Draw a stem with leaves
  • Worksheet 32 – Draw a head of garlic and its roots
  • Worksheet 33 – Draw a flower

Order Fundamental Graphite Techniques from Katie Lee at www.katieleeartist.com.


Updated November 2013

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Updates at Classes Near > York:


Hollengold Farm / WH Art & Design

Wendy Hollender is an illustrator, author, and teacher. She teaches at the New York Botanical Garden, Hollengold Farm, and the National Tropical Botanical Garden. View Wendy’s prints, cards, scarves, and books at DrawingInColor.com. See what’s new at Wendy’s Hollengold Farm.

One-day Drawing Workshops at Hollengold Farm – Saturday, October 30, 2010. Spend a day drawing the growing harvest at Hollengold Farm. Select a subject from the farm’s large organic garden. A farm-fresh lunch is include with each workshop. Draw in colored pencil and watercolor pencil. Workshops are held 10 am – 4 pm. Cost per workshop: $90, includes lunch. Register with Wendy at wendy@whartdesign.com or register online at DrawingInColor.com.

Botanical Illustration Workshop on Kaua’i with Alice Tangerini and Wendy Hollender – February 24 – March 6, 2011, The National Tropical Botanical Garden. Learn botanical illustration techniques while using graphite pencil, colored pencil, and pen-and-brush with ink. Alice Tangerini is the illustrator at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History and Wendy Hollender is an artist, author, and teacher. Workshop fee: $860 (includes lunch). Airfare and lodging extra. To register or to obtain more information, contact Judy Roberts at NTBG, 3530 Papalina Road, Kalaheo, HI, 96741. (808) 332-7324, ext. 207.

  • Feb. 24 – Class begins with Wendy Hollender; tour of the botanical garden
  • Feb. 25 – Classroom instruction with Wendy Hollender and Alice Tangerini
  • Feb. 26 – Classroom instruction with Wendy Hollender and Alice Tangerini
  • Feb. 27 – Classroom instruction with Alice Tangerini
  • Feb. 28 – Free Day
  • Mar. 1 – Field trip to Limahuli Garden
  • Mar. 2 – Classroom instruction with Wendy Hollender and Alice Tangerini
  • Mar. 3 – Classroom instruction with Wendy Hollender and Alice Tangerini
  • Mar. 4 – Classroom instruction; group exhibition of student work
  • Mar. 5 – Classroom instruction with Wendy Hollender and Alice Tangerini
  • Mar. 6 – Field trip and picnic at Makauwahi Cave
  • Itinerary subject to change.

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